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Chapter 6 Projectile Motion 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectiles • A projectile is any object that moves through space where the only force acting on the object is gravity. • The path that a projectile follows is called a trajectory. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectile Motion A ball thrown across the room follows an arced trajectory. Example of projectile motion, which combines horizontal and vertical motion. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectile Motion Projectile motion combines uniform horizontal motion (constant speed)with freefall vertical motion (constant acceleration. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Uniform Horizontal Motion 1 2 3 Equal Distances 4 5 Arbitrary Rolling ball (with no friction) is an example of uniform motion. Velocity of the ball is constant so distance between “frames” (equal time between frames) is constant. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Accelerating Vertical Falling 1 (Release) 1 4 1 2 3 3 9 Falling is an example of accelerating motion. Total distance from point of release increases in the ratios 1:4:9:16:25:… or 12:22:32:42:52… Distance between frames increases as 1:3:5:7:9…. 5 16 4 6-Jul-17 7 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectile Motion 1 2 3 4 1 5 Arbitrary 3 Ball rolling off of a table combines horizontal and vertical motion. Falling starts with frame #4, vertical distances increasing as 1:3:5:7:… Horizontal distances equally spaced as with uniform motion. Frames #4 to #7 are projectile motion. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU 6 5 7 7 Check Yourself At the instant a cannon fires a cannonball horizontally over a level range, another cannonball held at the side of the cannon is released and drops to the ground. Which strikes the ground first? 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Demo: Fall and Fire FALL 1 2 One ball is released and falls straight down. Other ball is fired 3 horizontally. At all times the balls are at the same height. Hit the ground at the same time. 1 FIRE 1 2 3 3 5 4 6-Jul-17 4 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Movie: Shoot the Monkey 6-Jul-17 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxvsHNRXLjw Distance Fallen From Table 3.3 (page 47) we know that distance fallen in one second is 5 meters. This distance fallen is the same whether falling straight down or in projectile motion. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU 0.5 s 5 meters 1.0 s 1.5 s Projectile Motion & Curvature For initial speeds that are faster and faster, the range of the projectile is farther and farther. For very large speeds, the curvature of Earth starts to be noticeable. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectiles Launched at an Angle With no gravity, projectile would follow a straight line. Due to gravity, projectile falls beneath this line, just as if released from rest. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU With Gravity Parabolic Arc 4 1 Arbitrary 3 3 5 Arbitrary 2 5 1 7 6-Jul-17 6 Up and down motion is symmetric, as shown. Frame #4 is highest point of the parabolic arc of projectile motion. Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU 7 Maximum Range Maximum range is at 45 degrees (when air resistance is negligible). 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Demo: Trebuchet Trebuchet is a type of catapult popular in the 13th century. 45 degrees Warwolf 6-Jul-17 Release Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Movie: Trebuchet Contestant in annual pumpkin throwing contest, Punkin Chukin 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Projectile Motion with Drag Range reduced by air resistance. Shape of the arc is changed. Object lands at steeper angle. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Earth’s Curvature Curvature of the Earth is about 5 meters over a distance of 8000 meters (which is about 5 yards over 5 miles). 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Missing the Ground Suppose you throw a ball at a speed of 8000 m/s (about 18,000 mph). After one second, ball travels 8000 meters and falls 5 meters. In that distance, Earth curves by same amount (5 meters). If nothing stops the ball, what happens? 8000 m 5m NOT to Scale 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Newton’s Mountain Newton drew a similar illustration, picturing cannons firing from a tall mountain. If a cannon was powerful enough, the cannonball would orbit Earth. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Orbits and Centripetal Force Gravity provides the centripetal force required for a satellite to move in a circle. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Check Yourself Satellites orbit at least 150 km (about 100 miles) above the surface of Earth because: There is almost no gravity at that altitude? There is almost no air resistance? 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Getting into Orbit Rocket needs to lift above the atmosphere and then fire thrusters to acquire the required orbital speed of about 8 kilometers per second. Returning to Earth, air resistance slows the spacecraft during reentry. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Elliptical Orbits For speeds higher than 8 km/s, the orbit is elliptical instead of circular. 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU Escape Speed If speed exceeds 11.2 km/s then object escapes Earth because gravity weakens (as object gets further away) and never slows the object enough to return it back towards Earth. 6-Jul-17 Hyperbolic Circular Elliptical Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU End of Part I: Mechanics 6-Jul-17 Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU