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Projectile Motion Chapter 5.4 – 5.6 Notes. Projectile Motion A projectile is any object that moves through the air or space, acted on only by gravity.

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Presentation on theme: "Projectile Motion Chapter 5.4 – 5.6 Notes. Projectile Motion A projectile is any object that moves through the air or space, acted on only by gravity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Projectile Motion Chapter 5.4 – 5.6 Notes

2 Projectile Motion A projectile is any object that moves through the air or space, acted on only by gravity (and air resistance, if any) Examples of projectiles include: a cannonball shot from a cannon a stone thrown in the air a ball rolling off the edge of a table a spacecraft circling Earth The horizontal component of projectile motion is just like the horizontal motion of a ball rolling freely along a level surface without friction The vertical component of a projectile’s velocity is like the motion for a freely falling object

3 Components of Projectiles Example of separating a projectile motion into components: a.Roll a ball along a horizontal surface, and its velocity is constant because no component of gravitational force acts horizontally b.Drop the ball, and it accelerates downward and it covers a greater vertical distance each second

4 Components of Projectiles Most important, the horizontal component of motion for a projectile is completely independent of the vertical component of motion In other words, each component is independent of the other Their combined effects produce the variety of curved paths that projectiles follow

5 Projectiles Launched Horizontally When a ball is launched horizontally, its horizontal component of motion is constant—gravity acts downward, so the only acceleration of the ball is downward Compared to a ball that is just dropped straight down, both balls fall the same vertical distance in the same time—the vertical distance has nothing to do with the horizontal component of motion When air resistance is small enough to neglect, the path of a projectile accelerating in the vertical direction while moving at a constant horizontal velocity is a parabola

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7 Projectiles Launched at an Angle No matter the angle at which a projectile is launched, the vertical distance of fall beneath the idealized straight-line path is the same if the time is the same The vertical distance is independent of what’s happening horizontally When a cannon is fired, the cannonball would follow the straight-line path if there were no gravity Since there is gravity, the cannonball falls beneath the straight-line path at the same vertical distance it would fall if it were released from rest

8 Height of a Projectile When a cannonball is fired, the horizontal component is always the same and only the vertical component changes At the top of the projectile, the vertical component is zero— therefore, the velocity at the top of the projectile is only the horizontal component

9 Range of Projectile Motion The angle at which a projectile is launched affects the distance that it will travel When a projectile is fired at a steep angle, it will travel a higher path, but cover a shorter distance When a projectile is fired at a lesser angle, it will travel a farther distance but its path will not be as high

10 Speed of a Projectile Without air resistance, a projectile will reach maximum height in the same time it takes to fall from that height to the ground The deceleration due to gravity going up is the same acceleration due to gravity coming down—the projectile will hit the ground with the same speed it had when it was projected upward When there is air resistance, the path of a high-speed projectile will fall below the ideal path


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