Ignoring friction, It will roll to its initial height.
In practice, due to friction and other effects, it will not get to the height but somewhat less.
No, slope and initial value are not the same. The slope refers to the steepness or incline of a line on a graph, whereas the initial value represents the y-coordinate of the point where the line intersects the y-axis.
The ENDPOINT
distance equals initial velocity times change in time interval plus half of accerlation plus time interval squared
Positive acceleration.
No. What counts in this case is the vertical component of the velocity, and the initial vertical velocity is zero, one way or another.
No, slope and initial value are not the same. The slope refers to the steepness or incline of a line on a graph, whereas the initial value represents the y-coordinate of the point where the line intersects the y-axis.
The popular answer to this question would be Galileo. However, contrary to popular belief Galileo did not invent the telescope. He built his own telescope about a year after their initial creation and later made significant improvements.
And what is the question?
For uniform acceleration the average speed is the initial speed plus the final speed divided by two.
i feel bad because the man died
The origin.
The ENDPOINT
distance equals initial velocity times change in time interval plus half of accerlation plus time interval squared
The volume of the obtained solution is decreased compared with the sum of the two initial volumes.
Wikipedia credits the initial development of the telescope to three men from the Netherlands: Hans Lippershey, Zacharias Janssen, and Jacob Metius in 1608. It's possible that earlier models existed, but we don't know who might have done it. We do know that it wasn't Galileo, and it wasn't 1609, which was when Galileo received his telescope. Galileo did substantially improve the design of telescopes, and he was (to the best of our knowledge) the first person to point a telescope to the skies.
Positive Feedback
compare differences in design strategies for developing an initial layout design for a new and for developing a revised layout design?