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A stone of mass m is thrown upward at a 30? angle to the horizontal. At the instant the stone reaches its highest point, why is the stone neither gaining nor losing speed?

User HeavenOSK
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2 Answers

2 votes
First you need to know to gain or lose speed you must have acceleration of deacceleration in the direction of speed !!

so at highest point , the only acceleration is gravity and that is in the downward direction so , the velocity remains constant !!
User Marc Sloth Eastman
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4 votes

Answer:

At highest point of the path the acceleration is perpendicular to velocity direction so there is no change in speed at this moment.

Step-by-step explanation:

When an object is thrown at an angle of 30 degree with the horizontal with some initial speed

then we will have


v_i = v_ocos\theta \hat i + v_o sin\theta\hat j

now its acceleration due to gravity is given as


a = 0 - g\hat j

with the help of kinematics we can say that its velocity after any time "t" is given as


v_f = v_i + at


v_f = v_ocos\theta \hat i + (v_o sin\theta - gt)\hat j

now when it will reach to its highest point then its velocity in y direction becomes zero


v_f = v_o cos\theta \hat i

now since final velocity is along x direction only at the highest point while its acceleration at that point is due to gravity so at that moment there is no change in speed.

User Arntg
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