horizontal
IUG_DimensionConstraintGstarCAD provides you eight Dimensional Constraint types:LinearConstrains the horizontal or vertical distance between points.Linear(Horizontal)Constrains the X distance between points on an object, or between two points on different objects.Linear(Vertical)Constrains the Y distance between points on an object, or between two points on different objects.AlignedConstrains the distance between points on an object or between two points on different objects.AngularConstrains the angle between line or polyline segments, the angle swept out by an arc or a polyline arc segment, or the angle between three points on objects.RadiusConstrains the radius of a circle or arc.DiameterConstrains the diameter of a circle or arc.ConvertConvert associative dimensions to dimensional constraints.
speed is the ratio of the distance an object moves per time unit (seconds,minutes hours)
Answer Both refer to an object that is in a cirular motion. Radial Acceleration is a velocity change of the object as it moves away from the center of rotation. Tangential Velocity is a change of velocity of the object as it moves in a line that is tangential to the circular path it is moving.
Work is done.
[object Object]
To find the horizontal distance of an object dropped by a plane, you can use the formula: distance = velocity x time. First, calculate the time it takes for the object to fall using the formula: time = √(2 x height / g), where g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2). Then, multiply the time by the horizontal velocity of the plane to find the horizontal distance the object travels.
Increasing the horizontal velocity to the maximum in a projectile motion will cause the object to travel further horizontally before hitting the ground. This is because the horizontal velocity determines how far the object will travel in the horizontal direction before gravity pulls it down. The vertical motion of the object will remain the same, but the increased horizontal velocity will result in a longer horizontal distance traveled.
It means there is no velocity - it is at rest and nothing is moving. The slope of the line is velocity - a horizontal line is zero slope = zero velocity
You cannot because you do not know how long before the object falls to the ground and so stops moving.
Increasing the initial horizontal velocity of an object would cause it to cover more horizontal distance in the same amount of time, leading to a longer horizontal range. The object would maintain the same vertical acceleration due to gravity, so it would still follow a parabolic trajectory but reach a farther horizontal distance before hitting the ground.
You cannot. A distance vs time graph only measures radial distance - that is, distance from the origin to the object. If the object is going around the origin along a circular path, the distance vs time graph will not show any change in distance.The [incorrect] answer that you are required to give is that the graph will be a horizontal line during that period. But as explained above, the horizontal graph only means the object has no movement towards or away from the origin, not that it has no movement.
No, horizontal velocity does not affect the rate of vertical velocity. Each component of velocity (horizontal and vertical) is independent of the other. They act separately to determine the motion of an object.
If the curve is horizontal, then the speed is constant. If that horizontal graph lies on the x-axis, then the constant speed is zero, and the object is stationary.
Your question is incomplete. It sounds like you are asking how the object falls. Aside from air resistance, the only force acting on it is the vertical component of gravity. Therefore, the object will fly a distance x = v (2d/g)1/2 where v is the horizontal velocity, d is the distance from the ground, and g is the acceleration of gravity.
Not necessarily. If the horizontal line is laying on top of the x-axis, then the speed is zero at any time, and the object isn't moving. But if the horizontal line is parallel to the x-axis, then the object is moving with constant speed.
To find the velocity of an object in motion, you can calculate it by dividing the distance the object travels by the time it takes to travel that distance. This formula is expressed as velocity distance/time. The velocity is a measure of how fast an object is moving in a specific direction.
To find the velocity of an object in physics, you can use the formula: velocity distance / time. This formula calculates how fast an object is moving in a specific direction. Simply divide the distance the object has traveled by the time it took to travel that distance to determine its velocity.