Physics virgin on freely falling objects

In summary, when a ball is dropped from a window and another ball is thrown upward at the same time, the balls will pass each other at 3/4 of the way up to the window, with the thrown ball going farther due to its greater initial speed.
  • #1
noodle21
You drop a ball from a window on an upper floor of a building. it strikes the ground with velocity v. You now repeat the drop, but have a friend down on the street who throws another ball upward at velocity v. Your friend throws the ball upward at exactly the same time that you drop yours from the window. At some location, the balls pass each other. Is this location at the halfway point between window and ground, above this point, or below this point?
 
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  • #2
1. You are in the wrong forum. This one is Quantum Mechanics. There is a forum for help with college physics.

2. Anyway, your friend's ball starts upward with a velocity v, but your ball starts with velocity = 0. So whose ball gets to the halfway point first? Think about it.
 
  • #3
Originally posted by noodle21
You drop a ball from a window on an upper floor of a building. it strikes the ground with velocity v. You now repeat the drop, but have a friend down on the street who throws another ball upward at velocity v. Your friend throws the ball upward at exactly the same time that you drop yours from the window. At some location, the balls pass each other. Is this location at the halfway point between window and ground, above this point, or below this point?

Originally posted by krab
1. You are in the wrong forum. This one is Quantum Mechanics. There is a forum for help with college physics.

2. Anyway, your friend's ball starts upward with a velocity v, but your ball starts with velocity = 0. So whose ball gets to the halfway point first? Think about it.

Well, apparently it got moved! In your second comment, you seem to be implying that since the ball thrown up starts with speed v while the ball dropped starts with speed 0, the ball thrown will "move faster". Don't you think acceleration (and deceleration) will have something to do with it?

Suppose the window is h meters above the ground. Both balls have an acceleration of -g. The ball dropped will have speed (negative so downward) of v1(t)= -gt and the ball thrown upward will have speed (positive so upward) v2(t)= v- gt.

The height, at time t, of the dropped ball is
h1(t)= -(g/2)t2+ h while the height, at time t, of the thrown ball is h2(t)= vt- (g/2)t2.

However, v is not just some arbitrary speed. It is the speed the dropped ball has when it hits the ground: The dropped ball hits the ground when h1(t)= (-g/2)t2+ h= 0 or when
t= [sqrt](2h/g). At that time, v= -g([sqrt](2h/g)= -[sqrt](2hg).
Of course, the speed of the ball thrown up is [sqrt](2hg).

They will pass when they both have the same height at the same time:
-(g/2)t2+ h= [sqrt](2hg)t- (g/2)t2.
By golly, the accelerations cancel out! This reduces to
[sqrt](2hg)t= h so t= h/[sqrt](2hg)= [sqrt](h/2g).

At that time, h1= (-g/2)(h/2g)+ h= -h/4+ h= (3/4)h.
Of course, h2= [sqrt](2hg)[sqrt](h/2g)-(g/2)(h/2g)
= h- h/4= (3/4)h.

Well, I'll be! krab was right! The ball thrown upward, because it had the greater initial speed (and we DIDN'T have to take acceleration into account- it canceled out) goes farther. The two balls pass 3/4 of the way up to the window.
 

1. What is a freely falling object in physics?

A freely falling object is an object that is only influenced by the force of gravity. This means that the object is not experiencing any other external forces, such as air resistance or friction.

2. What is the acceleration of a freely falling object?

The acceleration of a freely falling object is approximately 9.8 meters per second squared (m/s^2) on Earth. This value is also known as the acceleration due to gravity (g).

3. How does mass affect the motion of a freely falling object?

The mass of an object does not affect its motion when falling freely. This means that all objects, regardless of their mass, will experience the same acceleration due to gravity.

4. What is the difference between a freely falling object and a projectile?

A freely falling object is only influenced by the force of gravity, while a projectile is affected by both gravity and an initial horizontal velocity. This means that a projectile will follow a curved path, while a freely falling object will only move vertically.

5. How does the height of a drop affect the motion of a freely falling object?

The height of a drop does not affect the acceleration of a freely falling object, but it does affect the object's final velocity. The higher the drop, the greater the final velocity of the object will be when it reaches the ground.

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