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is acceleration always positive |
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| Jul19-12, 11:45 PM | #1 |
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is acceleration always positive
Hi,
Acceleration is defined as the change in velocity over the time interval. Is acceleration ever negative, or is it always positive? If I were to throw a rock up in the air, is it always accelerating at 10 m/s22 even up until it stops and starts falling back down? Thanks, |
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| Jul20-12, 12:05 AM | #2 |
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With gravity. The velocity would be negative in relation to gravity on its way up, so the acceleration due to gravity would chip away at its' upward velocity, until it reached zero, and then started to fall, and accelerate down. |
| Jul20-12, 02:11 AM | #3 |
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Is acceleration always positive? : no it can be zero.
Is acceleration always non-negative? : well acceleration is a vector which always has a non negative magnitude. However it may act in one of two directions along its line of action. We denote this by using the positive or negative sign. |
| Jul20-12, 11:18 PM | #4 |
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is acceleration always positive
The following statements apply to one-dimensional motion (so that a sign is sufficient to indicate the direction of a vector).
The acceleration is positive when the object is moving in the positive direction and speeding up, or when moving in the negative direction and slowing down. The acceleration is negative when the object is moving in the positive direction and slowing down, or when moving in the negative direction and speeding up. |
| Jul21-12, 07:07 AM | #5 |
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This thread made me think of another question. I'm going to post it here because it's closely related, but feel free to move it elsewhere.
In the simplest possible terms (no math, please), how would one describe the acceleration of a satellite in an elliptical orbit? My instinct is that it's constantly changing, but I'm not sure. |
| Jul21-12, 07:28 AM | #6 |
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Strictly speaking, acceleration, like velocity, is a vector quantity, with direction as well as magnitude. In the very limited "one dimensional" case, that direction can be interpreted as "positive" or "negative". So the answer to your question is "no, accleration is not always positive. It can be positive or negative". Or course, the magnitude of acceleration, like the magnitude of any vector, is always positive.
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| Jul21-12, 12:50 PM | #7 |
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Hello Danger, you would be correct about your elliptic.
Here is a smart little graphic app showing this. http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulati...ybug-motion-2d |
| Jul21-12, 02:05 PM | #8 |
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Thank you for the response, Studiot. That's a cool site. I've bookmarked it and suspect that I'll be spending a few idle hours playing around there.
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| Jul21-12, 04:14 PM | #9 |
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| Jul21-12, 04:58 PM | #10 |
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| Jul23-12, 01:18 PM | #11 |
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A new word to my arsenal of physics vocabulary! |
| Jul23-12, 05:32 PM | #12 |
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as velocity can be negative, acceleration too
you throw a rock upwards and its acceleration always points towards the earth vertically, the same direction the gravity is. acceleration is all about the force on it, per newton's laws. and the value of acceleration doesn't vary as long as there's no difference between the object and observer. say you can observe it from an elevator that's moving at a constant speed, the acceleration stands as it is despite how fast or slow you move |
| Jul23-12, 11:26 PM | #13 |
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| Jul24-12, 06:19 AM | #14 |
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| Jul24-12, 09:03 PM | #15 |
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E.g. The Earth has a more or less constant speed in its orbit around the Sun but its direction is changing all the time so its acceleration alters, yet the magnitude of the force (and the acceleration) pulling it towards the Sun is more or less constant as the mean Earth-Sun distance doesn't vary greatly. |
| Jul25-12, 02:14 AM | #16 |
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accelleration ever negative?
Think of accelleration as a vector. Is a vector ever negative? Robin Hood once said "I didn't shoot that arrow backwards. I shot it in a different direction!" If it seems to be negative it's just really positive but pointed in a different direction. But if you're stuck in Line-Land (1 dimensional) then yes, you have positive and negative. |
| Jul25-12, 06:59 PM | #17 |
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I think this is the gist of the whole thread here. On one hand it's an exercise in pedantry, on the other trying to be scientifically/mathematically precise using language which can often be ambiguous.
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