Direction when the magnitude of the instantaneous velocity is 0

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the behavior of an object's velocity vector at the moment it reaches its maximum height when thrown straight up into the air. Participants explore the implications of a zero magnitude for velocity and its direction, considering both theoretical and conceptual aspects of motion, acceleration, and continuity in physics.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that at the maximum height, the velocity is zero, but acceleration due to gravity remains constant, leading to confusion about the direction of the velocity vector at that instant.
  • Others propose that a zero vector can have an indefinite direction, suggesting that while the magnitude is zero, the concept of direction remains ambiguous.
  • A few participants argue that the velocity function is continuous, while the velocity vector itself may not be, highlighting a psychological discontinuity in perceiving the change from upward to downward motion.
  • Some contributions emphasize that the transition of velocity from positive to negative through zero does not imply a discontinuity, as the motion can be described as a smooth curve.
  • Participants discuss the idea of defining the direction of the velocity vector as always upwards until it reaches zero, after which it transitions to downwards.
  • There are differing views on whether the change in direction at zero velocity constitutes a discontinuity, with some asserting that it is a continuous process.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no consensus on the nature of direction at zero velocity. Some agree on the continuity of the velocity function, while others challenge the interpretation of direction and discontinuity, indicating a lack of resolution on these points.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the definitions of direction and the behavior of vectors can lead to confusion, particularly in the context of zero magnitude and the transition of velocity. The discussion highlights the complexity of interpreting motion and continuity in physics.

Ikari
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Hi guys, sorry to ask such a basic question, but I'm studying for the MCAT and need to get my fundamentals down!

Anyway, my question is this: Consider an object which has been thrown straight up into the air. It will rise, then at the very top of its ascent, it changes direction and comes back down. Now, I'm pretty sure that at the moment when the object reaches its maximum height, the velocity becomes zero, although there must still be an acceleration (due to gravity), or else the object wouldn't fall back down again.

So, on a velocity-time graph, we would see a point where the velocity drops to zero, corresponding to the moment the object reaches its maximum height, right? Let's call this point q.

But I am confused, because, since velocity is a vector, it has a direction. In this case, the direction would be up as we approach q from the left, and down as we approach q from the right. So what would the direction of the velocity vector be, when we are actually at that point? I am tempted to say that, since the magnitude of the velocity vector is 0m/s, the object isn't actually moving in *any* direction. But if that is the case, then *when* does the direction of the object officially change from up to down?

Again, sorry to ask such a newbie question. If someone could elaborate on the behavior of the object at this point I would seriously appreciate it!
 
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Ikari said:
Hi guys, sorry to ask such a basic question, but I'm studying for the MCAT and need to get my fundamentals down!

Anyway, my question is this: Consider an object which has been thrown straight up into the air. It will rise, then at the very top of its ascent, it changes direction and comes back down. Now, I'm pretty sure that at the moment when the object reaches its maximum height, the velocity becomes zero, although there must still be an acceleration (due to gravity), or else the object wouldn't fall back down again.

So, on a velocity-time graph, we would see a point where the velocity drops to zero, corresponding to the moment the object reaches its maximum height, right? Let's call this point q.

But I am confused, because, since velocity is a vector, it has a direction. In this case, the direction would be up as we approach q from the left, and down as we approach q from the right. So what would the direction of the velocity vector be, when we are actually at that point? I am tempted to say that, since the magnitude of the velocity vector is 0m/s, the object isn't actually moving in *any* direction. But if that is the case, then *when* does the direction of the object officially change from up to down?

Again, sorry to ask such a newbie question. If someone could elaborate on the behavior of the object at this point I would seriously appreciate it!

When its acceleration vector switches direction, which happens instantaneously. That's my ignorant guess.
 
Keep in mind that the velocity changes magnitude, but the acceleration is constant. The only thing it does is change its direction. The velocity magnitude gets smaller and smaller, but not the acceleration.
 
The acceleration never changes direction. It always points down.

A vector of zero length can point in any direction.
 
Vanadium is absolutely correct.A zero vector has indefinite direction
 
Yes, I've got it backwards. I think this is a discontinuity question that doesn't have a satisfying answer. I guess Newton would have said when you move infinitesimally to the right in your graph. But infinitesimal is not zero.
 
Last edited:
There is no discontinuity here. Position is continuous. Velocity is continuous. Acceleration is not only continuous, it's constant.
 
The velocity's function is continuous, but not its vector.

Crudely :

velocity: \cup

vector: \uparrow ∅ \downarrow

None of this is getting at the questioner's problem. There is at least a psychological discontinuity. The velocity vector was up, then it was indefinite, then it was down.
 
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danR said:
The velocity's function is continuous, but not its vector.

I would say, V(t) = (x(t), y(t), z(t)) is a vector function of t that is continuous.

It will of course remain continuous if you express it in spherical coordinates.

(r(t),\phi(t),\theta(t))

but \phi(t) and \theta(t), are not continuous functions of t.

I don't see there is any problem with that.
 
  • #10
All functions in question here are continuous and differentiable on an open interval. There is no discontinuity. You could easily plot all three and they would all be smooth curves with no discontinuities or infinities or any sort (assuming the ball hits the ground at some point). The direction of a zero vector is indefinite but not undefined. It simply doesn't have a direction because it isn't moving.
 
  • #11
Thanks for the help everyone! So from reading everyone's comments, I'm thinking that it works like this: No matter how close you get to the left of the point in time where the velocity becomes 0, the velocity vector points up. Then at this point, the direction changes to indefinite. Then infinitely close to this point, but on the right side, the direction changes to down. I was confused for the reason that danR said, this is kind of a confusing problem because the direction of the velocity vector seems to be a discrete quality of the vector, which abruptly changes at the point where the velocity becomes 0. Think about the limits on either side of this point. From the left, the limiting values would approach 0, but with a direction of up. Whereas from the right, the limiting values approach 0, but with a direction of down. This is why I was confused!
 
  • #12
Hi.

At time t=0 the object is at the top q where where position x = 0.
Let tau be a small positive amount of time.

t=-tau; velocity v = g tau, x= -1/2 g tau^2.
t=0; v = 0, x=0
t= tau; v = -g tau, x= -1/2 g tau^2.

I find here nothing mysterious.
Regards.
 
  • #13
Ikari said:
I was confused for the reason that danR said, this is kind of a confusing problem because the direction of the velocity vector seems to be a discrete quality of the vector, which abruptly changes at the point where the velocity becomes 0.

The problem is, that has nothing to do with the continuity of the problem. In school, they tell you that a vector has magnitude and direction, but there is no quantity called direction that is inherent in a vector, just the number of coordinates. You can get infinitely close to zero from below and you are still negative and then you hit zero and you aren't, but that doesn't make it discontinuous. That is essentially what happens here. It is a one dimensional problem so it can be described by one number, the velocity. It passes from a positive number straight through the origin and continues on negative. There is no discontinuity, just a straight line. It is infinitely differentiable.
 
  • #14
Haha true enough! Thanks guys. I totally get it. Like I said, its been a while since I took a physics course!
 
  • #15
I will concede all that. The terms 'no direction', 'any direction', 'null direction' are rather confusing to me, but if it's called '0 direction', I have something numerical to specify in a vector operation. But computer programs have failed on 'discontinuous' shifts in wind direction gusts, for example, when vectors are involved.
 
  • #16
You could choose to define the vector's direction as always upwards, and then the vectors velocity would transition from positive to zero to negative.
 
  • #17
I think a better way to visualize this is to visualize the vector itself. It gets smaller and smaller and smaller and eventually disappears and then gets bigger again but going down. You will see that the vector smoothly transitions from pointing up to pointing down.
 

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