This MCQ module is based on: Projectile Circular Motion
Projectile Circular Motion
This assessment will be based on: Projectile Circular Motion
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Projectile Circular Motion
3.10 Projectile Motion
As an application of the ideas developed in the previous sections, we consider the motion of a projectile. An object that is in flight after being thrown or projected is called a projectile. Such a projectile might be a football, a cricket ball, a baseball or any other object. The motion of a projectile may be thought of as the result of two separate, simultaneously occurring components of motions:
- Horizontal motion: uniform velocity, no acceleration
- Vertical motion: constant acceleration \(\vec{g}\) due to gravity (downward)
It was Galileo who first stated this independence principle. In our discussion, we shall assume that the air resistance has negligible effect on the motion of the projectile.
Suppose that the projectile is launched with velocity \(\vec{v_0}\) that makes an angle \(\theta_0\) with the x-axis. After the object has been projected, the acceleration acting on it is that due to gravity:
The components of initial velocity \(\vec{v_0}\) are:
Equations of Projectile Motion
The position of the projectile at time t (taking g = 9.8 m/s²):
Velocity components:
Equation of the Trajectory (Parabola)
Eliminating t from the position equations: \(t = x/(v_0\cos\theta_0)\). Substituting in y:
This is the equation of a parabola. So the trajectory of a projectile is a parabola.
Time of Flight (T)
The projectile returns to the same height (y = 0) at time t = T. Setting y = 0:
Maximum Height (h_m)
At max height, \(v_y = 0\). So time to reach max height = T/2. Using \(v_y^2 = v_{0y}^2 - 2gh_m\):
Horizontal Range (R)
The horizontal distance covered when projectile returns to same height:
Worked Example 1 (NCERT Example 3.7): Projectile from Mountain
Galileo, in his book Two New Sciences, stated that "for elevations which exceed or fall short of 45° by equal amounts, the ranges are equal." Prove this statement.
Take two angles: \(\theta_1 = 45° + \alpha\) and \(\theta_2 = 45° - \alpha\).
Then \(2\theta_1 = 90° + 2\alpha\) and \(2\theta_2 = 90° - 2\alpha\).
\[\sin(90° + 2\alpha) = \cos(2\alpha) = \sin(90° - 2\alpha)\] Therefore \(R_1 = R_2\). ∎
Example: 30° and 60° give the same range; 20° and 70° give the same range.
Worked Example 2 (NCERT Example 3.8): Cricket Ball Range
A hiker stands on the edge of a cliff 490 m above the ground and throws a stone horizontally with initial speed of 15 m/s. Neglecting air resistance, find the time taken by the stone to reach the ground, and the speed with which it hits the ground (g = 9.8 m/s²).
\(v_{0x} = 15\) m/s, \(v_{0y} = 0\), drop height = 490 m, g = 9.8 m/s².
Time to reach ground: Vertical motion: \(490 = \frac{1}{2}(9.8)t^2\) \[t^2 = \frac{2 \times 490}{9.8} = 100 \Rightarrow t = \boxed{10 \text{ s}}\]
Speed when hitting ground: \[v_x = 15 \text{ m/s (unchanged)}\] \[v_y = g\,t = 9.8 \times 10 = 98 \text{ m/s}\] \[|\vec{v}| = \sqrt{15^2 + 98^2} = \sqrt{225 + 9604} = \sqrt{9829} \approx \boxed{99.1 \text{ m/s}}\]
Worked Example 3 (NCERT Example 3.9): Football Kick
A cricket ball is thrown at a speed of 28 m/s in a direction 30° above the horizontal. Calculate (a) maximum height, (b) time taken by the ball to return to the same level, (c) distance from the thrower to the point where the ball returns to the same level.
(a) Max height: \[h_m = \frac{v_0^2 \sin^2\theta_0}{2g} = \frac{(28)^2 (0.5)^2}{2 \times 9.8} = \frac{784 \times 0.25}{19.6} = \boxed{10.0 \text{ m}}\]
(b) Time of flight: \[T = \frac{2v_0\sin\theta_0}{g} = \frac{2 \times 28 \times 0.5}{9.8} = \frac{28}{9.8} \approx \boxed{2.86 \text{ s}}\]
(c) Range: \[R = \frac{v_0^2 \sin 2\theta_0}{g} = \frac{(28)^2 \times \sin60°}{9.8} = \frac{784 \times 0.866}{9.8} \approx \boxed{69.3 \text{ m}}\]
🎯 Interactive Simulation: Projectile Launcher
Adjust launch speed and angle. Observe the parabolic trajectory and compare ranges.
Test Galileo's claim: Try θ = 30° and θ = 60° — same range!
3.11 Uniform Circular Motion
When an object follows a circular path at constant speed, the motion of the object is called uniform circular motion (UCM).
Centripetal Acceleration
Even though the speed is constant in UCM, the velocity vector is constantly changing direction. This change of velocity produces an acceleration directed towards the center of the circle, called centripetal acceleration.
Angular Speed and Period
If the object completes one full revolution in time T (the period):
where f = 1/T is the frequency (revolutions per second, Hz).
Worked Example 4 (NCERT Example 3.10): Insect on Turntable
An insect trapped in a circular groove of radius 12 cm moves along the groove steadily and completes 7 revolutions in 100 s. (a) What is the angular speed and the linear speed of the motion? (b) Is the acceleration vector a constant vector? What is its magnitude?
(a) Time per revolution: T = 100/7 ≈ 14.3 s.
\[\omega = \frac{2\pi}{T} = \frac{2\pi \times 7}{100} = 0.44 \text{ rad/s}\] \[v = \omega r = 0.44 \times 0.12 = \boxed{0.053 \text{ m/s}}\]
(b) The acceleration vector is NOT constant — its magnitude is constant but direction continuously changes (always toward center). Its magnitude: \[a_c = \omega^2 r = (0.44)^2 \times 0.12 = \boxed{0.023 \text{ m/s}^2}\] or equivalently \(a_c = v^2/r = (0.053)^2 / 0.12 = 0.023\) m/s².
Demonstration setup: Tie a small bucket of water to a sturdy rope (length ~1 m). Spin the bucket in a vertical circle quickly enough so the water doesn't spill — even when the bucket is upside down at the top!
At the top of the circle, the bucket is upside down. The forces on the water are:
- Gravity (mg) — pointing down (toward center)
- Normal force from bucket bottom — pointing down (toward center)
For the water to stay in the bucket, gravity alone must provide AT LEAST the centripetal force:
\[mg \le \frac{mv^2}{r} \Rightarrow v \ge \sqrt{gr}\]
For r = 1 m: v_min = √(9.8 × 1) ≈ 3.13 m/s.
Conclusion: If the bucket moves slower than 3.13 m/s at the top, gravity exceeds the required centripetal force and the water falls. This is why you must spin fast enough!
🎯 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. Calculate the maximum height attained by the javelin. L3 Apply
Q2. Calculate the horizontal range of the javelin. L3 Apply
Q3. The athlete in Q1 wants to maximize range. By how much should they change the angle? Justify with computation. L4 Analyse
Q4. A car moves around a curve of radius 50 m at constant speed 20 m/s. Calculate centripetal acceleration. L3 Apply
Q5. HOT (Create): Design a roller coaster loop. The loop has radius 15 m. What's the MINIMUM speed required at the top of the loop so passengers don't lose contact with the track? Justify by listing the forces and computing. L6 Create
At the top of the loop, the track is above the passenger. Forces on passenger:
- Gravity (mg) — DOWN (toward center of loop)
- Normal from track (N) — DOWN (toward center)
For circular motion: \(mg + N = \frac{mv^2}{r}\). Minimum speed when N = 0 (just losing contact):
\[v_{min} = \sqrt{gr} = \sqrt{9.8 \times 15} = \sqrt{147} \approx \boxed{12.12 \text{ m/s}}\]
So roller coaster must be designed for at least ~12 m/s at the top. (Typically engineers add safety factor ≥ 1.4 → minimum design speed ~17 m/s.)
🧠 Assertion–Reason Questions
Choose: (A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R doesn't explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: The trajectory of a projectile is always a parabola.
R: Horizontal velocity is constant and vertical motion has constant downward acceleration.
A: Two projectiles thrown at angles 30° and 60° with the same speed have the same range.
R: Range R = (v₀²sin 2θ)/g, and sin(2×30°) = sin(2×60°) = sin 60°.
A: A particle in uniform circular motion has constant velocity.
R: The speed of the particle remains constant throughout the motion.