Ball dropped from a moving train

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When a ball is dropped from a moving train, it appears to follow a parabolic path from the perspective of a stationary observer on the platform due to its initial horizontal velocity matching that of the train. Both observers agree that gravity acts on the ball, causing a downward acceleration. However, the stationary observer sees the combination of this downward motion and the constant horizontal motion, resulting in a parabolic trajectory. In contrast, the observer on the train perceives the ball as falling straight down because they share the same horizontal velocity. This phenomenon illustrates the principles of relativity and the importance of reference frames in understanding motion.
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Can anybody please explain why the ball dropped from a moving train appears to take a parabolic path w.r.t the frame of reference of a person standing at the platform?

Thanks
 
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vijay_singh said:
Can anybody please explain why the ball dropped from a moving train appears to take a parabolic path w.r.t the frame of reference of a person standing at the platform?

Thanks

In the reference frame of the platform the ball has initial horizontal velocity equal to the velocity of the train. The vertical direction is the same observed on the train because both observers agree that gravity is acting on the ball causing an acceleration -g. But, in the platform's reference frame it already had x-velocity, and the resultant path is a parabola.
 
I am currently reading about this in Einstein's writings. When the person on the train drops the ball and looks down he just sees it fall straight down because it is moving at the same velocity he is.

However, a person standing on a platform (not in motion) sees the ball fall down and perpendicular to his view. (In two dimensional motion)
It is all about the reference point. Relativity is a very cool and interesting topic!
 
Nabeshin said:
In the reference frame of the platform the ball has initial horizontal velocity equal to the velocity of the train. The vertical direction is the same observed on the train because both observers agree that gravity is acting on the ball causing an acceleration -g. But, in the platform's reference frame it already had x-velocity, and the resultant path is a parabola.

Thanks Nabeshin, your explanation makes sense.

Vijay
 
Just to add a little bit: the reason it is a parabolic path is because the motion parallel to the direction of the train's motion is constant (equal to the speed of the train); meanwhile the position in the perpendicular direction (straight down) goes as t^2. It's this time squared that gives it a quadratic (parabola) shape.
 
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