Acceleration due to gravity at the space station
What is the acceleration due to gravity at the space station.
What is the acceleration due to gravity at the space station.
Applying Newton's first law to answer some true/false statements about why objects move (or not).
Solving a word problem to find average velocity and speed of an object in one-dimension.
The idea of the electric field, how it's useful, and explains how the electric field is defined.
Why do astronauts appear weightless despite being near the Earth?
How to solve for the horizontal displacement when the projectile starts with a horizontal initial velocity. We also explain common mistakes people make when doing horizontally launched projectile problems.
Figuring out the acceleration of ice down a plane made of ice.
Determining how fast something will be traveling upon impact when it is released from a given height.
Explore the various forces acting on a block sitting on an inclined plane. Learn how to break the force of gravity into two components - one perpendicular to the ramp and one parallel to the ramp. Finally, using geometry and trigonometry, learn how to calculate the magnitude of each component of force that is acting on the block.
Instantaneous speed is a measurement of how fast an object is moving at that particular moment. Instantaneous velocity is a vector quantity that includes both the speed and the direction in which the object is moving. Learn how to find an object’s instantaneous speed or velocity in three ways - by using calculus, by looking at the slope of a given point on a graph of an object’s rate vs. time, or by using kinematic formulas if the object’s acceleration is constant.