Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot...

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Projectile Motion Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations Notes and Explanations

Transcript of Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot...

Page 1: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Projectile MotionProjectile Motion

Notes and ExplanationsNotes and Explanations

Page 2: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

What is a Projectile?What is a Projectile?

• Anything that is thrown or shot through the air.

• Projectiles have velocities in two directions.– Horizontal Motion: Motion parallel to the

Earth’s surface.– Vertical Motion: The force of gravity pulling

down on the object.

Page 3: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 4: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Projectile MotionProjectile Motion

• A projectile’s horizontal and vertical motion are completely independent of each other.

• Gravity will effect a projectile and a falling object in the same way.

• Therefore, if an object is dropped and thrown at the same time they will hit the ground at the same time. It does not matter that the projectile travels a farther distance.

Page 5: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 6: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 7: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 8: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 9: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 10: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 11: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.
Page 12: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Newton’s CannonNewton’s Cannon

Newton described the possible trajectories of a cannonball shot from a tall mountain. Weaker shots fall in parabolas, but soon the curvature of the earth becomes more important. If you could ignore air resistance, stronger shots would clear the horizon. If you could launch the cannonball fast enough, its curve would match the curvature of the earth. This is called an orbit. A satellite is no more than a projectile moving fast enough to continually clear the horizon as it falls.

Simulation of Newton’s Cannon

Page 13: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Curved PathCurved Path

• A projectile is any object that is projected by some means and continues in motion by its own inertia. Without gravity, the object would follow a linear motion; with gravity, the path curves.

• The path is surprisingly simple if the horizontal and vertical components of motion are investigated separately.

Page 14: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

HORIZONTAL COMPONENT:HORIZONTAL COMPONENT:

• If friction is ignored (and we always ignore friction), then there are no forces acting on the x-axis. – If net force is zero, then acceleration is zero.

• If acceleration is zero, then the object is either at rest or moving at constant velocity.

– Since we know that the object is already in motion, the projectile must be moving at constant speed on the x-axis.

• It moves of its own inertia and covers equal distances in equal intervals of time.

Page 15: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

VERTICAL COMPONENT:VERTICAL COMPONENT:

• Projectiles move just like a freely falling object along the y-axis.

• The changing motion is due only to acceleration due to gravity. – On the way up, the object decreases its

speed as it goes against gravity. – On the way down, speed increases as it

moves with gravity.

Page 16: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Vector CombinationVector Combination

• The curved path of a projectile is a combination of these horizontal and vertical components. The curved path of a ball (as shown in the diagram) is best analyzed by considering the horizontal and vertical components of motion separately.

• Note that the ball’s horizontal component of motion doesn’t change as the falling ball moves forward.

• Note the vertical positions become farther apart with time and that the vertical distances traveled are the same as if the ball were simply dropped.

Page 17: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Projection AnglesProjection Angles

• With the same initial speed but different projection angles, a projectile will reach different altitudes (height above the ground) and different ranges (distances traveled horizontally).

• However, the same range can be obtained from two different angles, symmetrically around a maximum of 45˚, as shown in the graph.

Page 18: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

SymmetrySymmetry

• The path of a projectile is symmetrical… • It rises to its maximum height in the same time it

takes to fall from that height to the ground. • Because acceleration is the same all of the time,

the speed it loses while going up is the same as the speed it gains while falling.

• Therefore the speeds are the same at equal distances from the maximum height, where the vertical speed is zero.

Page 19: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Questions: Questions:

• At the instant a horizontally held rifle is fired over level ground, a bullet held at the side of the rifle is released and drops to the ground. Ignoring air resistance, which bullet strikes the ground first?

• A projectile is launched at an angle into the air. If air resistance is negligible, what is the acceleration of its vertical component of motion? Of its horizontal component of motion?

• At what part of its trajectory does a projectile have minimum speed? • A ball tossed into the air undergoes acceleration while it follows a

parabolic path. When the sun is directly overhead, does the shadow of the ball across the field also accelerate?

• Draw a free body diagram of a projectile. • What type of motion occurs on the horizontal axis? • How in the world can object be moving upward if the only force

acting upon it is gravity? • Are horizontal forces required to keep the projectile moving

horizontally?

Page 20: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

AnswersAnswers

• They strike at the same time.• -9.8 m/s2; 0• At maximum height.• NO!• Should show weight only.• Constant • Inertia• NO!

Page 21: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

MemorizeMemorize the following conceptual the following conceptual notions about projectiles:notions about projectiles:

• a projectile is any object upon which the only force is gravity, • projectiles travel with a parabolic trajectory due to the influence of

gravity, • there are no horizontal forces acting upon projectiles and thus no

horizontal acceleration, • the horizontal velocity of a projectile is constant (never changing in

value), • there is a vertical acceleration caused by gravity; its value is ~10

m/s2, down, • the vertical velocity of a projectile changes by ~10 m/s each second, • the horizontal motion of a projectile is independent of its vertical

motion. • the speed of a projectile is symmetrical around its maximum height.

Page 22: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

Use these sites to answer the Use these sites to answer the questions on the next slide.questions on the next slide.

Simulation #1

Simulation #2

Simulation #3

Simulation #4

Page 23: Projectile Motion Notes and Explanations. What is a Projectile? Anything that is thrown or shot through the air. Projectiles have velocities in two directions.

QuestionsQuestions

– What launch angle maximizes the range (horizontal distance)? – What launch angle maximizes the height reached? – How does the time spent in the air depend on the launch angle? – Compare what happens at one angle, and then at 90 degrees minus

that angle (30 and 60, for instance). – What does Newton’s Cannon show?– What happens to the trajectory when the mass of the projectile is

changed? – What effect does air resistance have on a trajectory?– What happens to the trajectory when the initial velocity is changed?– What conditions must exist so that two projectiles will collide in

midair? What effect do the initial velocities, height differences, and angles have on this collision?

– Compare the trajectories of a projectile that is under the influence of gravity and one that is not?