In the absence of air resistance, the force of gravity has no effect on the horizontal
component of a projectile's velocity, and causes the vertical component of its velocity
to increase by 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second downward for every second of its flight.
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
In the absence of air resistance, the force of gravity has no effect on the horizontal component of a projectile's velocity, and causes the vertical component of its velocity to increase by 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second downward for every second of its flight.
The horizontal component of velocity for a projectile is not affected by the vertical component at all. Horizontal component is measured as xcos(theta) Vertical component is measured as xsin(theta) Whereas theta is the angle, and x is the magnitude, or initial speed.
horizontal velocity
Unbalanced force of gravity will not have any effect on horizontal component but makes a variation in the vertical component
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
In the absence of air resistance, the force of gravity has no effect on the horizontal component of a projectile's velocity, and causes the vertical component of its velocity to increase by 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second downward for every second of its flight.
The horizontal component of velocity for a projectile is not affected by the vertical component at all. Horizontal component is measured as xcos(theta) Vertical component is measured as xsin(theta) Whereas theta is the angle, and x is the magnitude, or initial speed.
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
One that goes directly up - the velocity having no horizontal component.
horizontal velocity
Unbalanced force of gravity will not have any effect on horizontal component but makes a variation in the vertical component
The horizontal component of a projectile's velocity doesn't change, until the projectile hits somethingor falls to the ground.The vertical component of a projectile's velocity becomes [9.8 meters per second downward] greatereach second. At the maximum height of its trajectory, the projectile's velocity is zero. That's the pointwhere the velocity transitions from upward to downward.
The vertical velocity is 0. The horizontal velocity is constant during the entire trajectory (and may be zero).