Projectile Motion Graphs: Radius of Curvature as a Function of X and Time

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the analysis of projectile motion, specifically focusing on the radius of curvature as a function of horizontal distance (x) and time. The original poster presents a scenario involving a projectile launched at an angle with a specified velocity and seeks to graph the radius of curvature based on their calculations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to derive expressions for velocity and acceleration in the context of projectile motion, questioning their understanding of the relationships between these variables. They express uncertainty about their calculations and seek clarification on how to find the normal acceleration.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, with some suggesting corrections to the original poster's equations and others exploring the implications of their findings. There is a mix of attempted solutions and ongoing uncertainty regarding the derivation of normal acceleration.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working within the constraints of a homework assignment, which may limit the information available for deriving solutions. There is an emphasis on verifying assumptions and ensuring the accuracy of mathematical expressions throughout the discussion.

Warr
Messages
119
Reaction score
0
A projectile is fired at an angle 30 degrees to the horizontal at a muzzle velocity of 450 m/s. Graph the radius of curvature as a function of x, and as a function of time.

I'm pretty clueless here:

Here's what I think:

[tex]\vec a = (v^2/\rho)\hat {e_n} + \dot v\hat {e_t}[/tex]

where [tex]v[/tex] is the velocity in the direction of motion for any given point in space along the parabola, [tex]\rho[/tex] is the radius of curvature

so then from this

[tex]a_n = v^2/\rho[/tex]

where [tex]a_n[/tex] is the acceleration at any point in space along the parabola in the direction normal to the direction of motion

so therefore to find a plot of [tex]\rho[/tex] in terms of x, I must find

[tex]\rho = v(x)^2/a_n(x)^2[/tex]

so what I need to know is how to find the [tex]v(x)[/tex] and [tex]a_n(x)[/tex]

or am I going abouit this all wrong..thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
ok I think I may have gotten [tex]v(x)^2[/tex]

by setting
[tex]v_x(x) = v_ocos(30)[/tex] (1)
and
[tex]v_y(x) = v_osin(30)-gt[/tex] (2)

then substituing

[tex]t = x/{v_ocos(30)}[/tex] into (2)

then I used

[tex]v(x)^2 = v_x(x)^2 + v_y(x)^2[/tex]

after simplifying, got

[tex]v(x)^2 = v_o^2 - 2gxtan(30) - (gx/{v_ocos(30)})^2[/tex]

so this is in parabolic form..which would make sense for the magnitude of v with respect to x..

but if this is right..I'm still confused about how to get [tex]a_n[/tex]

:S
 
I actually just found a mistake on my v(x)..the last term should have a plus in front of it

still having trouble with [tex]a_n[/tex] though
 
Last edited:
ok, I think I solved it, but I can't be completely sure

assuming my v(x) is right (with the exception that the sign before the 3rd term should be +ve and not -ve),

would it make sense that a_n (acceleration normal to the motion) would be given by
[tex]a_n = gcos(\theta)[/tex], where [tex]\theta[/tex] is the angle of the motion of the projectile relative to the horizontal at any x

such that I could calculated [tex]cos(\theta)[/tex]

by trigonometry

[tex]cos(\theta) = v_x(x)/v(x)[/tex]

so subbing back into the [tex]a_n[/tex] equation

[tex]a_n=gv_x(x)/v(x)[/tex]

and therefore I would be graphing the function
[tex]\rho = v(x)^2/a_n[/tex]
[tex]\rho = v(x)^2/(gv_x(x)/v(x)) = v(x)^3/(gv_x(x))[/tex]
 
Warr said:
ok, I think I solved it, but I can't be completely sure
assuming my v(x) is right (with the exception that the sign before the 3rd term should be +ve and not -ve),

You can be sure in your derivation.

[tex]v(x)^2 = v_o^2 - 2gxtan(30) + (gx/{v_ocos(30)})^2[/tex]

would it make sense that a_n (acceleration normal to the motion) would be given by
[tex]a_n = gcos(\theta)[/tex], where [tex]\theta[/tex] is the angle of the motion of the projectile relative to the horizontal at any x

such that I could calculated [tex]cos(\theta)[/tex]

by trigonometry

[tex]cos(\theta) = v_x(x)/v(x)[/tex]

so subbing back into the [tex]a_n[/tex] equation

[tex]a_n=gv_x(x)/v(x)[/tex]

and therefore I would be graphing the function
[tex]\rho = v(x)^2/a_n[/tex]
[tex]\rho = v(x)^2/(gv_x(x)/v(x)) = v(x)^3/(gv_x(x))[/tex]

It is correct, you solved your problem by yourself, congratulation!

ehild
 

Similar threads

Replies
40
Views
4K
Replies
18
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
3K
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
3K
Replies
15
Views
4K