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Help for projectile please!! (1 Viewer)

supermike

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hi! i had trouble understanding projectile quesitions that ask u to find the velocity of projeciton. i know the pythagoras' theorem thing usually works ...
(v dot square= x dot square + y dot square ) sry for the bad reprsentation X)
now we know there is "t" in y dot while x dot is a constant, so id like to know wat value of "t" we should substitute into the equation!!
i seen a lot of examples dat just sub in 0, but sometimes its some other numbers!!

"t" = time


thanks !!!!
 
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Thecorey0

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hi! i had trouble understanding projectile quesitions that ask u to find the velocity of projeciton. i know the pythagoras' theorem thing usually works ...
(v dot square= x dot square + y dot square ) sry for the bad reprsentation X)
now we know there is "t" in y dot while x dot is a constant, so id like to know wat value of "t" we should substitute into the equation!!
i seen a lot of examples dat just sub in 0, but sometimes its some other numbers!!

"t" = time


thanks !!!!
The velocity of the projectile is often not constant, therefore each value of t leads to different velocities. If you want the initial velocity, you sub in t=0, if you want the velocity 5 seconds after launch, you sub in t=5 etc. The value of t used depends on when the velocity you are after occurs.
 

supermike

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The velocity of the projectile is often not constant, therefore each value of t leads to different velocities. If you want the initial velocity, you sub in t=0, if you want the velocity 5 seconds after launch, you sub in t=5 etc. The value of t used depends on when the velocity you are after occurs.

hey thanks Thecorey0!!! so i suppose it depends on the wording of the question if it simply asks for "velocity of projection"!?!?!?

thanks again XD
 

untouchablecuz

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the velocity of projection is the velocity of the projectile when t=0
 

supermike

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its a different interpretation from thecoreyo 's , but i think i get a fair idea wat to do with these questions now THANKS!!
 

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