Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMichael Collins Modified over 9 years ago
2
Projectile Motion
3
Instructional Objectives: Students will be able to: –Define Projectile Motion –Distinguish between the different types of projectile motion –Apply the concept to a toy catapult and measure its velocity
4
What is Projectile Motion?
5
A projectile, once projected, continues in motion by its own inertia and is influenced only by the downward force of gravity.
6
Projectile Motion Projectile Motion – objects that are thrown or launched into the air and are subject to gravity Use of components avoid vector multiplication Components simplify projectile motion
7
Projectile motion is free fall with an initial horizontal velocity
9
An object projected horizontally will reach the ground in the same time as an object dropped vertically. No matter how large the horizontal velocity is, the downward pull of gravity is always the same.
10
Examples of Projectile Motion Launching a Cannon ball
12
Projectiles follow parabolic motion
13
The path of a projectile is called its trajectory. The trajectory of a projectile in free fall is a parabola.
14
Types of Projectile Motion Horizontal –Motion of a ball rolling freely along a level surface –Horizontal velocity is ALWAYS constant Vertical –Motion of a freely falling object –Force due to gravity –Vertical component of velocity changes with time Parabolic –Path traced by an object accelerating only in the vertical direction while moving at constant horizontal velocity
15
Horizontal Projectiles Δy = ½gΔt 2 Δx = v x Δt g = 9.81 m/s 2 vxvx ΔyΔy ΔxΔx ΔtΔt
17
The Royal Gorge in Colorado rises 321 m above the Arkansas River. Suppose you kick a little rock horizontally off the bridge. The rock hits the water such that the magnitude of its horizontal displacement is 45.0 m. Find the speed at which the rock was kicked.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.