Does Launching a Projectile at 45 Degrees Alter Its Initial Velocity?

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Launching a projectile at different angles does not alter its initial velocity; it will maintain the same speed regardless of the angle of launch. For example, a projectile fired at 0 degrees with a velocity of 500 m/s will still have a speed of 500 m/s when fired at 89 degrees. The key difference lies in the horizontal and vertical components of the velocity, which change with the angle. Thus, the initial resultant velocity remains constant at the moment of launch. Understanding these principles is crucial in projectile motion analysis.
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If a projectile is launched horizontally, and has initial velocity X, then is launched with the same force from an angle, let's say 45 degrees, would the initial resultant velocity (at time=0) still be X?
 
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Let's say you fire something at 0 degrees with a velocity of 500m/s in the horizontal direction. Do you believe it will be traveling at 500m/s in the horizontal direction if you fire the same canon and projectile at 89 degrees?
 
Well, that makes my question sound REALLY simple. And no, I think it would go 500m/s at 89 degrees.
 
Yes, no matter what angle you fire this projectile, it will always exit that cannon at 500m/s. The only thing that will change is the horizontal and vertical components
 
Yeah, that's what I thought. Thank you so much.
 
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