Horizontal Velocity in Monkey-Dart Problem

AI Thread Summary
In the Monkey-Dart experiment, the dart's trajectory is influenced by the angle of launch, alpha, which is fixed based on the monkey's height and distance. While a lower angle increases horizontal velocity, it does not necessarily mean the dart reaches the monkey faster, as the initial speed of the dart is the critical factor. The dart must be fired at a sufficient speed to ensure it intersects with the monkey's vertical drop. Lower angles may result in longer travel times despite higher horizontal velocities due to the physics of projectile motion. Ultimately, regardless of the angle, as long as the dart is launched with enough speed, it will hit the monkey.
adam.kumayl
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
In the Monkey-Dart experiment (where a monkey let's go of a vine exactly the same time a dart is shot at him), the dart is known to reach the monkey because the distance from the vine to where he ends up is equal to difference between where the dart was aimed and where the dart ends up : both 1/2gt^2.

My question is that the horizontal velocity of the dart obviously increases as Alpha (the angle the dart was shot upwards at) decreases. Meaning if the dart is shot directly up (90 degrees), the dart has no horizontal velocity. So if the lower curves have a higher horizontal velocity (vcos(alpha)) as we know they do, how is it that it takes them longer to get to the SAME x position than it takes one of the trajectories with a higher alpha angle?

Thanks!
 

Attachments

  • Monkey Dart.png
    Monkey Dart.png
    37.1 KB · Views: 557
Physics news on Phys.org
You are not interpreting the problem correctly. The angle alpha is fixed as determined by the monkey's height and distance from the initial start point of the dart. It is the initial speed of the dart that may be varied, from an arbitrarily high value of unimaginable speed, to a relatively low value sufficient to reach the monkey before it hits the ground. Within this range of speed, with the dart fired at the angle alpha, the dart will always hit the monkey (ignoring air resistance of course). The lower curves have a lower horizontal velocity.
 
That is a well formulated and logical answer. I sincerely thank you for making understand.
 
Hi there, im studying nanoscience at the university in Basel. Today I looked at the topic of intertial and non-inertial reference frames and the existence of fictitious forces. I understand that you call forces real in physics if they appear in interplay. Meaning that a force is real when there is the "actio" partner to the "reactio" partner. If this condition is not satisfied the force is not real. I also understand that if you specifically look at non-inertial reference frames you can...
I have recently been really interested in the derivation of Hamiltons Principle. On my research I found that with the term ##m \cdot \frac{d}{dt} (\frac{dr}{dt} \cdot \delta r) = 0## (1) one may derivate ##\delta \int (T - V) dt = 0## (2). The derivation itself I understood quiet good, but what I don't understand is where the equation (1) came from, because in my research it was just given and not derived from anywhere. Does anybody know where (1) comes from or why from it the...
Back
Top