Dynamic Equilibrium -- Acceleration of a rock thrown from a bridge

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the dynamics of a rock thrown from a bridge, specifically focusing on its acceleration due to gravity in the absence of air resistance. Participants explore the implications of Newton's laws in this context.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants question the nature of forces acting on the rock and the relationship between gravitational acceleration and the motion of the rock. There is an exploration of how throwing the rock at different angles affects its motion.

Discussion Status

Some participants have gained clarity on the concept that the only force acting on the rock during free fall is gravity, leading to a consistent acceleration of g. There is an acknowledgment of the distinction between forces and accelerations, and some guidance has been offered regarding the use of diagrams to visualize forces.

Contextual Notes

Participants are discussing the scenario under the assumption of neglecting air resistance, focusing solely on gravitational effects. There is an emphasis on understanding the foundational principles of Newton's laws in relation to the problem.

Dman0500
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Homework Statement
A rock is thrown from a bridge at an angle 30° below horizontal. Immediately after the rock is released, is the magnitude of its acceleration greater than, less than, or equal to g? Explain.
Relevant Equations
Conceptual
I know the acceleration of the rock is equal to g, but why. If we neglect air resistance, what is actually making the rock fall? Wouldn't it be that g overcomes the acceleration of the y plane at some point so the rock starts coming down or in this case accelerate more by throwing below 0 degrees?
 
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What are forces on the rock?
 
I suppose just g and a(y-axis)
 
Dman0500 said:
I suppose just g and a(y-axis)

There is a weight force, of magnitude ##mg##, acting downward. That is the only force! "##a##" is not a force, it is an acceleration!

What is Newton's second law?
 
Alright I get it now!
alright so when something is thrown upward, there is still only g?
 
Dman0500 said:
Alright I get it now!
alright so when something is thrown upward, there is still only g?

Yes, something undergoing free-fall (only force is the gravitational ##m\vec{g}##) will accelerate at ##\vec{g}##. Make sure you are clear to distinguish forces from accelerations!

The result follows from Newton's first law; the net force is ##m\vec{g}##, and Newton tells us that ##m\vec{g} = m\vec{a}##. So ##\vec{a} = \vec{g}##.

If you throw something downward, it has an initial downward component of velocity. However the acceleration is still just ##\vec{g}##!
 
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Make way more sense thank you
 
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No problem. If you are ever in doubt about similar matters, draw a diagram! Draw the forces on the diagram, and then use ##\vec{F} = m\vec{a}##.
 

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