When does the speed of a ball thrown in the air start decreasing?

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When a ball is thrown vertically, its speed begins to decrease immediately after it leaves the hand due to the constant downward acceleration from gravity. The maximum speed achieved by the ball is its initial launch speed, assuming no air resistance. In real-life scenarios, air resistance causes the speed upon return to be less than the launch speed. In exam conditions where air resistance is ignored, the speed of the ball when it returns to the hand is equal to the launch speed. Understanding these principles is essential for solving related physics problems accurately.
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When you throw a ball up (vertically; with no horizontal component), when does the speed of the ball start decreasing? I mean it has to decrease for it to stop (momentarily) and then come back down.. Does the speed start decreasing as soon as the ball leaves your hand? or is it at another stage during the journey?
 
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welcome to pf!

hi influx! welcome to pf! :smile:
influx said:
When you throw a ball up (vertically; with no horizontal component), when does the speed of the ball start decreasing?


as soon as it leaves your hand …

its constant acceleration is g downward the whole time it's in the air

if it starts with speed v upward, then after time t its speed is v - gt (ie downward after t = v/g) :wink:
 


tiny-tim said:
..

Thanks :)

So the fastest speed the ball can achieve is the initial speed (the speed you launch the ball with)?

Also, on the journey back down, the speed of the ball at the instant it hits your hand (assuming you have not moved your hand since the launch) has to be less than the launch speed right? Is this due to the work done against air resistance?

Thanks :P
 
influx said:
Thanks :)

So the fastest speed the ball can achieve is the initial speed (the speed you launch the ball with)?

only if you catch it! :biggrin:
Also, on the journey back down, the speed of the ball at the instant it hits your hand (assuming you have not moved your hand since the launch) has to be less than the launch speed right? Is this due to the work done against air resistance?

erm :redface: … in exam questions, there's never any air resistance! :wink:

(but yes you're correct … in real life, air resistance reduces the energy, and so the speed on the way down will be less)
 
Oh yeah true! Thanks :)

So in exam questions (where air resistance = 0), its safe to assume that the launch speed = the speed of the ball at the instant when it hits your hand?
 
influx said:
So in exam questions (where air resistance = 0), its safe to assume that the launch speed = the speed of the ball at the instant when it hits your hand?

yup! :biggrin:

(for that reason, if you're asked to find the speed on landing of something thrown out of a window, it doesn't matter whether it was thrown up or down!)
 
tiny-tim said:
yup! :biggrin:

(for that reason, if you're asked to find the speed on landing of something thrown out of a window, it doesn't matter whether it was thrown up or down!)

Thanks :). One non-physics related question, how do I stop getting emails every time someone posts in a thread I posted in?
 
at the top of each thread there's a secondary menu-bar …

click "Thread Tools" and then "Unsubscribe from this Thread" :wink:
 
tiny-tim said:
at the top of each thread there's a secondary menu-bar …

click "Thread Tools" and then "Unsubscribe from this Thread" :wink:

Thank you
 
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