Velocity of Object: Will it Stop in Time?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the behavior of an object's velocity as time approaches infinity. It is clarified that while the velocity will decrease and approach zero, it will never actually reach zero. The equation V(t)=v0/e^(t/τ) illustrates this concept, indicating that the object slows down significantly over time. Participants agree that the object will not travel an infinite distance but will instead get infinitely close to a stopping point without ever arriving. This understanding emphasizes the difference between approaching a value and actually reaching it.
ytsejam
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hi this is first time for me here and it seems very useful.

my question is:

the expression is velocity of object while t->infinity

the object will stop somewhere in time? and if it will , when

i think it will go on forever. but I'm not sure


thanks

liron
 

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A good way to look at it is to remember that e^{-x}=\frac{1}{e^x}, so
V(t)=\frac{v_0}{e^{t/x}}
Now it should be clear what happens as time approaches infinity. Keep in mind, though that approaching a number is something different from reaching it.
 
correction

correction...my fault in the paste.
the x supposed to be taw-time constant.

it is change your asseveration?


thanks
 
That really doesn't change anything, now it is just:
V(t)=\frac{v_0}{e^{t/\tau}}
 
so it will stop?
 
As time approaches infinity the speed will get closer and closer to zero, but not reach it. It will move so slowly that it will not travel an infinite distance, it will just get closer and closer to some point, going more and more slowly and never getting there.
 
...what i thought.

thanks for clearing it for me
 
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