yes
a rocket which has lost its balance on coming into earth's atmosphere, a ball thrown from a height,etc
Vulcan was thrown twice from Olympus, first by his mother, and than by his father; such falling from a great height wounded him into lameness.
They are called lava bombs they are chunks of semi molten rock thrown up from the volcano and then falling from a great height. When they hit the ground they have the shape of a bomb.
The gravity acting on a rising object and that on a falling object are the same when these objects are at the same height. What is different is that a rising object is decelerating by the force of gravity and the falling object is accelerating.
a stone is thrown from the top of a building with an initial horizontal velocity of 20 m/s if it is thrown from a height of 30 m and air resistance is neglected, find: a) time it takes the stone to reach the ground b) range
Acceleration is dependent on the initial velocity of how fast the object is leaving the projectile. The vertical acceleration is greater when the object is falling than when the object reaches the peak in height. However, if the object is thrown horizontally and there is no parabola in its shape then there is not as great of an acceleration.
We have no idea how big the rock is, and no way to figure it out. But we can calculate that it reaches 11.48 meters above the ground before it starts falling.
the distance it travels before falling to the ground
force thrown distance height thrown
6.261 m/s
Everyone does.
The body will move: * Because of its initial motion (the question states that it is thrown) * Because of gravity