less than the speed it had when thrown upward.
when abody is thrown upward,how many forces act on it?what is the role of the force with which the body has been thrown upward? After a body is thrown upwards, you have gravity pulling it down and friction slowing it.
The only constant when a ball is thrown upward is the acceleration due to gravity acting in the opposite direction to the velocity of the ball. Other factors, such as air resistance and the initial velocity of the ball, may change as the ball moves.
The velocity of the ball is 16 feet/sec when it is thrown upward.
No, the horizontal component of velocity remains constant for an object in projectile motion as long as no external forces act horizontally on the object. In the case of a ball thrown upward, the horizontal component of velocity remains unchanged unless affected by air resistance or other external forces.
The velocity of a ball thrown upward at 16 ft/sec would be 16 ft/sec when it leaves the hand, but it will decrease due to gravity as it moves upward.
when abody is thrown upward,how many forces act on it?what is the role of the force with which the body has been thrown upward? After a body is thrown upwards, you have gravity pulling it down and friction slowing it.
it would be slower
Once it is in the air, the main forces are gravity, and air resistance.
The only constant when a ball is thrown upward is the acceleration due to gravity acting in the opposite direction to the velocity of the ball. Other factors, such as air resistance and the initial velocity of the ball, may change as the ball moves.
When the volleyball is caught back at the same level from which it was thrown, its velocity will be equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to its initial velocity due to the conservation of energy. Since it was thrown upward with an initial velocity of 5 m/s, it will have a velocity of -5 m/s when caught, indicating that it is moving downward. Thus, at the point of being caught, the velocity of the ball is 5 m/s downward.
The velocity of the ball is 16 feet/sec when it is thrown upward.
No, the horizontal component of velocity remains constant for an object in projectile motion as long as no external forces act horizontally on the object. In the case of a ball thrown upward, the horizontal component of velocity remains unchanged unless affected by air resistance or other external forces.
The velocity of a ball thrown upward at 16 ft/sec would be 16 ft/sec when it leaves the hand, but it will decrease due to gravity as it moves upward.
It is a force which acts in the upward direction.
The speed of a ball thrown upward upon striking the ground will be the same as the speed at which it was thrown, but in the opposite direction. The speed of a ball thrown downward upon striking the ground will be faster than the speed at which it was thrown due to the acceleration from gravity.
The initial velocity of the ball thrown upward at 16 ft per second is 16 ft/s.
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