The similarities between free falling and projectile motion both involve the effects of gravity on an object's motion. The key difference is that in free falling, the object falls straight down due to gravity, while in projectile motion, the object is projected at an angle and follows a curved path due to both horizontal and vertical components of motion.
No, a feather falling in a vacuum is not considered projectile motion. Projectile motion involves an object being launched horizontally with a certain velocity while experiencing the force of gravity, causing it to follow a curved path. In a vacuum, there is no air resistance or drag force acting on the falling feather, so it falls straight down due to gravity.
No, a basketball falling toward the hoop after being thrown is an example of projectile motion, not circular motion. Circular motion involves an object moving in a circular path around a central point, while projectile motion involves an object moving in a curved path under the influence of 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.
Projectile motion involves an object being launched horizontally or at an angle, experiencing both horizontal and vertical motion due to gravity. Free falling, on the other hand, involves an object falling under the influence of gravity without any initial horizontal velocity. Both situations follow the same laws of physics governing motion under gravity.
I'm not sure of any specific name for "vertical motion" other than falling or acceleration and deceleration due to gravity. You will have the force of gravity. You may also have an element of a centripetal force, but for all practical purposes this would be minimal near the surface of the earth.
No, a feather falling in a vacuum is not considered projectile motion. Projectile motion involves an object being launched horizontally with a certain velocity while experiencing the force of gravity, causing it to follow a curved path. In a vacuum, there is no air resistance or drag force acting on the falling feather, so it falls straight down due to 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.
No, a basketball falling toward the hoop after being thrown is an example of projectile motion, not circular motion. Circular motion involves an object moving in a circular path around a central point, while projectile motion involves an object moving in a curved path under the influence of gravity.
The dimension that controls time in falling body and projectile motion problems is vertical displacement, usually denoted as "y". Time affects how far an object falls or how far it travels horizontally in projectile motion. The equations of motion used to solve these problems involve time as a variable to calculate the position or velocity of the object at a given time.
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.
Projectile motion involves an object being launched horizontally or at an angle, experiencing both horizontal and vertical motion due to gravity. Free falling, on the other hand, involves an object falling under the influence of gravity without any initial horizontal velocity. Both situations follow the same laws of physics governing motion under gravity.
Projectile motion has two components horizontal motion and vertical motion. Gravity affects only the vertical motion of projectile motion.
I'm not sure of any specific name for "vertical motion" other than falling or acceleration and deceleration due to gravity. You will have the force of gravity. You may also have an element of a centripetal force, but for all practical purposes this would be minimal near the surface of the earth.
Projectile motion involves an object moving both horizontally and vertically, while free fall is when an object falls only vertically due to gravity. In projectile motion, the object has an initial horizontal velocity, while in free fall, the object is only affected by gravity.
Projectile.
motion of a projectile
Projectile motion is similar to free falling motion because both involve objects moving under the influence of gravity alone. In both cases, the only force acting on the object is gravity, causing it to accelerate downward at a constant rate (9.81 m/s^2). This results in a parabolic trajectory for projectiles and straight vertical motion for free falling objects.