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Projectile motion is a form of motion wherein an object moves along a curved path under the action of gravity only. The height of a projectile in motion is dependent on gravity.
45 degrees.
Assuming that seconds refers to the period, the frequency is the reciprocal (1 / period in seconds). The height of the wave is irrelevant in this case.
By statistical analysis. It is very difficult to calculate these using mechanics. Calculations of the trajectory of a projectile assume that the mass of the projectile is such that air resistance has a negligible effect. This is not the case when the projectile is confetti - even if it is packed densely to start with.
15.42 degrees
If a projectile takes 8 seconds to reach its maximum height, it will take another 8 seconds to return to its original elevation. Presuming it is lauched from flat ground and returns to the ground, its total time in flight would be 16 seconds. If it is launched from a hill, or at a hill, more information would be needed.
Range of a projectileThe path of this projectile launched from a height y0 has a range d.In physics, a projectile launched with specific initial conditions in a uniform gravity field will have a predictable range. As in Trajectory of a projectile, we will use:g: the gravitational acceleration-usually taken to be 9.80 m/s2 (32 f/s2) near the Earth's surfaceθ: the angle at which the projectile is launchedv: the velocity at which the projectile is launchedy0: the initial height of the projectiled: the total horizontal distance travelled by the projectileWhen neglecting air resistance, the range of a projectile will beIf (y0) is taken to be zero, meaning the object is being launched on flat ground, the range of the projectile will then simplify toso to increase the range θ shoud vary from 0 to 45 and after 45 it starts decreasing.
You can't unless you know gravity and air pressure as well.
initial velocity, angle of launch, height above ground When a projectile is launched you can calculate how far it travels horizontally if you know the height above ground it was launched from, initial velocity and the angle it was launched at. 1) Determine how long it will be in the air based on how far it has to fall (this is why you need the height above ground). 2) Use your initial velocity to determine the horizontal component of velocity 3) distance travelled horizontally = time in air (part 1) x horizontal velocity (part 2)
initial velocity, angle of launch, height above ground When a projectile is launched you can calculate how far it travels horizontally if you know the height above ground it was launched from, initial velocity and the angle it was launched at. 1) Determine how long it will be in the air based on how far it has to fall (this is why you need the height above ground). 2) Use your initial velocity to determine the horizontal component of velocity 3) distance travelled horizontally = time in air (part 1) x horizontal velocity (part 2)
The max height depends only on the angle and speed at release. It doesn't depend on the projectile's weight.
You cannot. You need to know either the initial speed or angle of projection (A).
h=u^2 sin^2x / 2g . where x is angle of release and h is the height of the projectile.
Projectile motion is a form of motion wherein an object moves along a curved path under the action of gravity only. The height of a projectile in motion is dependent on gravity.
The horizontal component of a projectile's velocity doesn't change, until the projectile hits somethingor falls to the ground.The vertical component of a projectile's velocity becomes [9.8 meters per second downward] greatereach second. At the maximum height of its trajectory, the projectile's velocity is zero. That's the pointwhere the velocity transitions from upward to downward.
Wind, elevation, trajectory, projectile weight, projectile configuration, barrel length, barrel rifling, friction or resistance in the barrel, force (charge) behind the projectile. There are other enviornental elements that can affect range as well.
It is not precisely clear what you are asking, but perhaps you are looking for the word "Trajectory," which refers to the path a projectile takes.