Another great post!
This thread is great. Every question and response has been a valid one.
x2 a lot of good info in this thread :thumb:
Another great post!
This thread is great. Every question and response has been a valid one.
No argument there. However, if the velocity is not changing, how can you say the parachutist is accelerating at a rate of 9.81 m/s^2?The acceleration of gravity is constant. Close to earth of course.
I already answered that one:No argument there. However, if the velocity is not changing, how can you say the parachutist is accelerating at a rate of 9.81 m/s^2?
Yes, he still has the 9.8 m/s^2, but his parachute is accelerating him the opposite direction at 9.8 m/s^2 as well, for a net 0 acceleration.
This is a special case, since there are TWO forces acting on the guy, not just gravity.
Yeah, fun stuff. It gets really confusing when you try to measure the speed of light when moving very fast. But... I'll leave that for another timeTo add to the weirdness:
There is no such thing as "stopped". There is only relative velocity. Say you are floating in space with a golf ball in your hand. You release the ball. OPPSS! It is going away from you, so it's moving. Grab it again. Release. OPPSS! It's coming towards you, so it's moving. Grab it again, release, and voila it's stopped.
Or is it? Well to you it's not going away or getting closer.
But you were moving 1,000,000 mph away from Earth. And at the same time, your brother was moving 1,000,000 mph towards the Earth doing the same experiment. Both of you have a golf ball that is "stopped", but they are moving 2,000,000 mph relative to each other.
You never know what "stopped" is. Earth is moving at fantastic speed relative to other celestial bodies. Where is the "stop" point that everything references to? There isn't one. Everything is moving depending how you look at it. And everything can be "stopped" at the same time to another observer.
Agree to disagree. If velocity is constant, acceleration is zero. I guess in a simple problem like this, I find it easier to solve using kinematics.I already answered that one:
Yeah, fun stuff. It gets really confusing when you try to measure the speed of light when moving very fast. But... I'll leave that for another time
To add to the weirdness:
There is no such thing as "stopped". There is only relative velocity. Say you are floating in space with a golf ball in your hand. You release the ball. OPPSS! It is going away from you, so it's moving. Grab it again. Release. OPPSS! It's coming towards you, so it's moving. Grab it again, release, and voila it's stopped.
Or is it? Well to you it's not going away or getting closer.
But you were moving 1,000,000 mph away from Earth. And at the same time, your brother was moving 1,000,000 mph towards the Earth doing the same experiment. Both of you have a golf ball that is "stopped", but they are moving 2,000,000 mph relative to each other.
You never know what "stopped" is. Earth is moving at fantastic speed relative to other celestial bodies. Where is the "stop" point that everything references to? There isn't one. Everything is moving depending how you look at it. And everything can be "stopped" at the same time to another observer.
I don't disagree with you. The acceleration IS zero. It just so happens there are two forces acting in opposite directions, that add to zero.Agree to disagree. If velocity is constant, acceleration is zero. I guess in a simple problem like this, I find it easier to solve using kinematics.
Acceleration is constant in this problem. Ignore air resistance.
X2Lordy, and I thought I had no life!! :spit:
It's a calculus problem. Take time slices, and calculate the velocity every millionth of second as the bullet approaches apogee. It goes slower, then slower, then slower, then REALLLLLY FREAKING SLOW, then during next millionth of second, it starts going down.
There is a max altitude, and there is a point in space where the bullet velocity is zero (0.00000000000000000000 fps) but it is not at that velocity for a length of time.
You can calculate out when and where velocity hits zero, but you cannot calculate how long it remains at zero velocity, because it doesn't. The duration is 1/infinity seconds.
But if it hits a bird on the way up, you better have a Fed Waterfowl sticker.
Another few to guess at,
we know the speed of light but whats the speed of dark ?
...
I was going to post something about a looter in Watts when they see the cops are coming, but decided not to.
I was going to post something about a looter in Watts when they see the cops are coming, but decided not to.