The Drop and Upward Throw of a Ball are Very Similar
Previously we determined the motion graphs for dropping a ball from 2.0 meters and throwing a ball up to 2.0 meters and catching it again. In this video I show that the reverse of the drop coupled with the drop itself is the same thing as throwing the ball upward. Make sense? Okay, watch the video.
Content Times:
0:13 Reviewing the previous graphs
0:25 The drop is the same as the 2nd half of the drop
0:48 Dropping the medicine ball in reverse
1:16 Bobby reviews
1:35 Links to Previous and Next Videos
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/drop-and-upward-throw.html"]Want Lecture Notes?[/url]
Next Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/stop-motion-photography.html"]Creating a Position vs. Time Graph using Stop Motion Photography[/url]
Previous 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]
Content Times:
0:13 Reviewing the previous graphs
0:25 The drop is the same as the 2nd half of the drop
0:48 Dropping the medicine ball in reverse
1:16 Bobby reviews
1:35 Links to Previous and Next Videos
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/drop-and-upward-throw.html"]Want Lecture Notes?[/url]
Next Video:
[url="http://www.flippingphysics.com/stop-motion-photography.html"]Creating a Position vs. Time Graph using Stop Motion Photography[/url]
Previous 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]
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