gravity
Projectile motion is a form of motion in which a projectile is thrown near the earth's surface. When thrown, the projectile moves along a curved path because of gravity. An example of projectile motion is a sprinkler shooting water into the air and the water falling back down to Earth.
(x, y) In most physics problems, projectile motion is shown on a 2-dimensional plane where x is the direction left and right, and y is the direction up and down.
Since I have read that the path of a projectile is always a parabola, I must say no. The parabolic shape of a projectile's path results from the combination of the force and direction with which it is launched and its weight.A ball rolling down a slope, is not Projectile Motion. While a cannon ball can be used to be a projectile, as far as Physics goes, that is not how it is operating at the moment (rolling down a slope).
yes because momentum deals with motion and if an object slows down there is no motion or MOMENTUM
Research on projectile motion is part of the physics in two dimension category. Videos can be found on youtube studying how projectiles and trajectories correlate with one another. University of physics (all editions) are textbooks that involve projectile motion in several different categories. This includes: being throw off a cliff at an angle, free body diagram, and launched straight up/down.
Gravity would be pulling down on a projectile object.
Projectile motion is a form of motion in which a projectile is thrown near the earth's surface. When thrown, the projectile moves along a curved path because of gravity. An example of projectile motion is a sprinkler shooting water into the air and the water falling back down to Earth.
Yes. Gravity acts downward on a projectile. That is why on Earth, objects eventually start to come down after throwing them, without the force of gravity acting downward the object would continue in a straight line forever.
Projectile motion is a form of motion in which a projectile is thrown near the earth's surface. When thrown, the projectile moves along a curved path because of gravity. An example of projectile motion is a sprinkler shooting water into the air and the water falling back down to Earth.
(x, y) In most physics problems, projectile motion is shown on a 2-dimensional plane where x is the direction left and right, and y is the direction up and down.
Friction slows down the motion of objects.
Since I have read that the path of a projectile is always a parabola, I must say no. The parabolic shape of a projectile's path results from the combination of the force and direction with which it is launched and its weight.A ball rolling down a slope, is not Projectile Motion. While a cannon ball can be used to be a projectile, as far as Physics goes, that is not how it is operating at the moment (rolling down a slope).
slow it down, like you
slow down
yes because momentum deals with motion and if an object slows down there is no motion or MOMENTUM
It resists the motion (slows it down)
Research on projectile motion is part of the physics in two dimension category. Videos can be found on youtube studying how projectiles and trajectories correlate with one another. University of physics (all editions) are textbooks that involve projectile motion in several different categories. This includes: being throw off a cliff at an angle, free body diagram, and launched straight up/down.