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Throwing a Ball in a Boat - Demonstrating Center of Mass
Flipping Physics posted a video in Dynamics
When I throw a massive ball to the left such that it lands in the other end of the canoe, what will happen to the positions of the objects? What if the ball does not land in the canoe? This video provides answers and solutions to those questions. Want Lecture Notes? This is an AP Physics 1 topic. Content Times: 0:01 Ball lands in canoe center of mass question 0:52 Demonstrating the answer 1:16 Explaining the answer 3:31 What is the ball lands outside the canoe? 4:28 Demonstrating the answer 5:08 The math solution 8:03 The physics works! Multilingual? Please help translate Flipping Physics videos! Previous Video: Center of Mass of an Object with a Hole Please support me on Patreon! Thank you to Will Longsworth, Christopher Becke, Jonathan Everett, Scott Carter, and Aarti Sangwan for being my Quality Control Team for this video. Thank you to Youssef Nasr for transcribing the English subtitles of this video.-
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How to find the center of mass of an object with a missing piece. Want Lecture Notes? This is an AP Physics 1 topic. Content Times: 0:07 The problem 1:18 Center of mass locations 2:59 Solving the problem 5:14 Testing the answer Next Video: Throwing a Ball in a Boat - Demonstrating Center of Mass Multilingual? Please help translate Flipping Physics videos! Previous Video: Center of Mass of an Irregular Object Please support me on Patreon! Thank you to Christopher Becke, Jonathan Everett, and Scott Carter for being my Quality Control Team for this video. Thank you to Youssef Nasr for transcribing the English subtitles of this video.
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How to find the center of mass of an irregularly shaped, flat object. Want Lecture Notes? This is an AP Physics 1 topic. Content Times: 0:08 The problem 0:57 Translating the problem 2:52 Area instead of mass 4:42 Solving the problem 6:05 Understanding the answer Next Video: Center of Mass of an Object with a Hole Multilingual? Please help translate Flipping Physics videos! Previous Video: Calculating the Center of Mass of a System of Particles Please support me on Patreon! Thank you to Christopher Becke, Jonathan Everett, Scott Carter, and Aarti Sangwan for being my Quality Control Team for this video. Thank you to Youssef Nasr for transcribing the English subtitles of this video.
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Three point objects are located at various locations on a Cartesian coordinate system. Mass 1, with a mass of 1.1 kg, is located at (1.0,1.5) m. Mass 2, with a mass of 3.4 kg, is located at (3.0,1.0) m. Mass 3, with a mass of 1.3 kg, is located at (1.5,2.5) m. Where is the center of mass of the three-object system? Want Lecture Notes? This is an AP Physics 1 topic. Content Times: 0:07 The problem 2:30 The equation 4:16 Solving the problem 5:51 Not the centroid! Next Video: Center of Mass of an Irregular Object Multilingual? Please help translate Flipping Physics videos! Previous Video: Do Your Feet Affect How Far You Slide on a Water Slide? Please support me on Patreon! Thank you to Christopher Becke, Jonathan Everett, Scott Carter, Kathy Willard, and Kevin Kulka for being my Quality Control Team for this video. Thank you to Youssef Nasr for transcribing the English subtitles of this video. Picture credits: Cartesian Coordinate System https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cartesian-coordinate-system.svg René Descartes https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Frans_Hals_-_Portret_van_René_Descartes.jpg
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