Placing a question mark at the end of a list of expressions or numbers does not make it a sensible question. Try to use a whole sentence to describe what it is that you want answered.One possible answer is that it has reached the maximum altitude of its trajectory.
When the stone reaches its highest point, earth's gravity ensures it has to come down.
Yes, whenever it reaches its highest point in the air
Just before it reaches the highest point, the vertical component of velocity is upward.Just after it passes the highest point, the vertical component of velocity is downward.There's no way you can change from an upward velocity to a downward velocity smoothlywithout velocity being zero at some instant. A.True.
Amplitude of a wave is simply the highest point the wave ever reaches.
Pointed towards the ground
When the stone reaches its highest point, earth's gravity ensures it has to come down.
Apogee
Yes, it does.
saudi arabia
Yes, whenever it reaches its highest point in the air
The highest point reached by any body in the sky, including the Sun, is called the zenith.
Yes, whenever it reaches its highest point in the air
Just before it reaches the highest point, the vertical component of velocity is upward.Just after it passes the highest point, the vertical component of velocity is downward.There's no way you can change from an upward velocity to a downward velocity smoothlywithout velocity being zero at some instant. A.True.
Amplitude of a wave is simply the highest point the wave ever reaches.
The plot element where the tension of the story reaches its highest point is known as the climax. It is the moment of greatest intensity or conflict in the narrative, where the protagonist faces their biggest obstacle or makes a crucial decision that determines the outcome of the story.
Pointed towards the ground
a solstice is a time when the sun reaches the point where it is lowest and highest at noon and longest and shortest day.solstice The two days of the year on which the sun reaches its greatest distance north or south of the equator