Graphing the Drop of a Ball from 2.0 Meters - An Introductory Free-Fall Acceleration Problem
By Flipping Physics, 05/22/2014
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This video continues a problem we already solved involving dropping a ball from 2.0 meters. Now we determine how to draw the position, velocity and acceleration as functions of time graphs.
Content Times:
0:17 Reviewing the previous lesson
1:00 Acceleration as a function of time
1:31 Velocity as a function of time
2:39 Position as a function of time
3:56 The Review
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/graphing-the-drop-of-a-ball.html"]Want Lecture Notes?[/url]
Next Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/throwing-a-ball.html"]Throwing a Ball up to 2.0 Meters & Proving the Velocity at the Top is Zero[/url]
Previous Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/dropping-a-ball-from-20-meters.html"]Dropping a Ball from 2.0 Meters[/url] - An Introductory Free-Fall Acceleration Problem
Content Times:
0:17 Reviewing the previous lesson
1:00 Acceleration as a function of time
1:31 Velocity as a function of time
2:39 Position as a function of time
3:56 The Review
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/graphing-the-drop-of-a-ball.html"]Want Lecture Notes?[/url]
Next Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/throwing-a-ball.html"]Throwing a Ball up to 2.0 Meters & Proving the Velocity at the Top is Zero[/url]
Previous Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/dropping-a-ball-from-20-meters.html"]Dropping a Ball from 2.0 Meters[/url] - An Introductory Free-Fall Acceleration Problem