Title: Projectile motion
1Projectile motion
- X meets Y and a beautiful dance ensues often
leading to great destruction.
2Projectiles
- A projectile has only one force acting upon - the
force of gravity - Examples golf, soccer ball, bullet, rock
dropped, javelin thrower
3The path (trajectory)of a projectile is a
parabola
Parabolic motion of a projectile
4Horizontal and vertical motion are independent
(90)
- There are the two components of the projectile's
velocity horizontal vX and vertical vY . - The horizontal component of its velocity does
not change. vX is constant
Gravity is the only force
5Horizontal and vertical motion are independent !
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7Package drop
- The package follows a parabolic path and remains
directly below the plane at all times - The vertical velocity changes (faster, faster)
- The horizontal velocity is constant!
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9Trajectory and Range
- Maximum range is at 45
- Low and high trajectory cover the same distance.
- 30 and 60
- 10 and 80
- 25 and
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12- Projectile motion Animation
- http//www.ngsir.netfirms.com/englishhtm/ThrowABal
l.htm - QT movie
- http//www.physicslab.co.uk/shoot.htm
13vX is constant vy changes
14Component of Motion Equation
X Acceleration
Y Acceleration
X Velocity
Y Velocity
X Position
Y Position
15History of science
- Projectile motion based on Aristotelian
principles.
16"Four Mortars Firing Stones into the Courtyard of
a Fort" (c.1504), by Leonardo da Vinci
(1452-1519)
17Projectile motion depicted in Nova Scientia
(1537), by Niccolò Tartaglia (c.1500-1557)
18"Judith Slaying Holofernes" (c. 1620), by
Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1652)
19A Treatise of the System of the World (published
posthumously, 1729) by Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
20 General 1-D
Velocity Equation
X-Component of
Velocity
Y-Component of Velocity
21Projectile motion at an angle
- Time for Peak of Projectile
- Maximum height
- Maximum Range
- Velocity and Position Equations using Angular
Dependence
22Experiment
What do you think? Which ball will hit the ground
first? a) The left ball will hit firstb) The
right ball will hit firstc) They will hit the
ground at the same time.
23Projectiles
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25Both balls hit the ground at the same time. Why?
- As soon as both balls are released by the
launcher, they are in "freefall. -
- The only force acting on both objects is gravity.
- Both objects accelerate at the same rate, 9.8m/s2
- Both objects covering the same distance at the
same rate and therefore hit the ground at the
same time - d ½ gt2 t2 2d/g
26Shoot the monkey!
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28Projectile
29Circular Motion Principles for Satellites
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31Satellites
32- Satellites can be classified by their functions.
Satellites are launched into space to do a
specific job. - (Astronomy, weather, communication, navigation,
remote sensing, space exploration)
http//collections.ic.gc.ca/satellites/english/eng
ineer/copy/index.html
33Orbits
- After a satellite is launched into space, it
needs little to no power to keep it moving - The orbit is a combination of the satellite's
velocity - the speed it is traveling in a
straight line - and the force of the Earth's
gravitational pull on the satellite.
34- Communication satellites, TV
- High orbit - 35, 850 km above the Earth
- located directly above the equator -equatorial
orbit - G.E.O. which stands for Geostationary Orbit.
- Geostationary satellites like geosynchronous
satellites take 24 hours to complete a rotation.
35- Low Earth Orbit, or L.E.O. L.E.O. is 248 to 621
miles high from earth. L.E.O. is good for
weather, survey and scientific satellites. - There is also the P.O. which is the Polar Orbit.
Polar Orbit is another low earth orbit used for
mapping, navigation and surveillance. - http//science.nasa.gov/realtime/
- http//www.lon-capa.org/mmp/kap7/orbiter/orbit.ht
m