Want this question answered?
The magnitude of its Velocity (Speed), and its Direction. These are the components of the Arrow (Vector) that represents its MOTION.
horizontal velocity
The motion of a projectile is a combination of two motions, a constant speed motion in the horizontal direction, and an accelerated motion in the vertical direction. The velocity component that changes along the path is Vy.
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
That combination is called "projectile motion". In the absence of air resistance, its shape is always a parabola.
The magnitude of its Velocity (Speed), and its Direction. These are the components of the Arrow (Vector) that represents its MOTION.
horizontal velocity
The motion of a projectile is a combination of two motions, a constant speed motion in the horizontal direction, and an accelerated motion in the vertical direction. The velocity component that changes along the path is Vy.
well...projectile motion is made of two different motions, or movements- horizontal movement and vertical movement so... i guess that it
That combination is called "projectile motion". In the absence of air resistance, its shape is always a parabola.
Some of the factors that determine the movements of a projectile include: air resistance, force of gravity, initial launch velocity, the angle a projectile was launched at, and the objects initial elevation.
Centripetal acceleration at a constant velocity and projectile motion are realistic comparisons, but only in this particular scenario. It should be noted that the vector quantity of both needs to be taken into consideration when answering this question. The vector component of centripetal acceleration moves inward, while outward for projectile motion. So, in essence, centripetal acceleration and projectile motion are not the same thing.
depends on the angle with which it is thrown, the velocity given to it.
D= vyt+1/2at2 a = (v2-v1)/t These are the two most basic formula that are used to figure out projectile motion questions, combine with SOHCAHTOA (trig) to solve simple projectile motion problems. Remember the horizontal velocity is always constant.
hypothesis on projectile motion
Because a projectile by definition, is in motion.
Yes. Acceleration is a change in velocity; velocity is a change in speed and or direction. I am not sure what motion means in a technical sense (velocity?).