At that moment, its vertical velocity is zero. Its horizontal velocity may or may not be zero, i.e., it may be moving sideways as well.
At the highest point of oscillation, the velocity of an object is zero because it has momentarily stopped moving in the vertical direction and is changing its direction of motion from upwards to downwards due to the force of gravity acting on it. This point is where all the kinetic energy has been converted into potential energy and vice versa.
In the case of an object thrown, batted, teed off, or dropped, its acceleration at the instant of its maximum velocity is 9.8 meters per second2 downward.
The highest point is the point where the ball's velocity transitions from upward to downward. At that instant, the ball's speed, velocity, momentum, and kinetic energy are all exactly zero.
Yes, but only for a single instant in time. When you throw a golf ball or a rock straight up, it has the constant downward acceleration of gravity from the moment it leaves your hand, but its velocity is certainly not constant. The velocity steadily decreases until the peak of the toss, and then it switches from upward to downward velocity. At the very peak, the velocity is zero for an instant.
The rate of change of velocity is known as acceleration. This can come in different forms (linear / nonlinear acceleration, angular acceleration ect).
At the highest point of oscillation, the velocity of an object is zero because it has momentarily stopped moving in the vertical direction and is changing its direction of motion from upwards to downwards due to the force of gravity acting on it. This point is where all the kinetic energy has been converted into potential energy and vice versa.
In the case of an object thrown, batted, teed off, or dropped, its acceleration at the instant of its maximum velocity is 9.8 meters per second2 downward.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.
The highest point is the point where the ball's velocity transitions from upward to downward. At that instant, the ball's speed, velocity, momentum, and kinetic energy are all exactly zero.
Yes, but only for a single instant in time. When you throw a golf ball or a rock straight up, it has the constant downward acceleration of gravity from the moment it leaves your hand, but its velocity is certainly not constant. The velocity steadily decreases until the peak of the toss, and then it switches from upward to downward velocity. At the very peak, the velocity is zero for an instant.
Yes, plus the direction that it's changing in.
The rate of change of velocity is known as acceleration. This can come in different forms (linear / nonlinear acceleration, angular acceleration ect).
The rate at which velocity is changing at a given instant is described by acceleration, which is a vector quantity that represents the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. It can be positive (speeding up), negative (slowing down), or zero (constant velocity).
Instantaneous acceleration is the rate at which an object's velocity is changing at a particular instant in time. It can be positive (speeding up), negative (slowing down), or zero (constant velocity). It is calculated as the derivative of velocity with respect to time.
The rate at which velocity is changing at a specific instant is called acceleration. It measures how quickly an object's velocity is changing, either by speeding up (positive acceleration) or slowing down (negative acceleration). It is the second derivative of an object's position with respect to time.
If an object's acceleration is zero at a specific instant in time, its velocity can either be zero or a constant non-zero value at that instant. This means that the object could be either at rest or moving with a constant velocity at that particular moment.
The same as that of the aircraft that he /she is in. If flying level, it would be zero.