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ydoaPs

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a projectile near the earth's surface moves in a parabola. so what is the equation for it's path? it opens down, so it is [imath]y=-ax^2+bx+c[/imath], but what are a b and c? if we put one zero at x=0, c goes away. that leaves [imath]y=-ax^2+bx[/imath]. so, what are a and b?

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the position of a projectile divided into x and y components is:

 

[Math] x=v_{0x} t [/math]

[math] y=v_{0y} t - \frac{1}{2} g t^2 [/math]

 

solve for [math]t[/math] and plug in:

 

[math]y= \frac{v_{0y}}{v_{0x}}x - \frac {1}{2} g (\frac{x}{v_{0x}})^2 [/math]

 

then, you know that

[math]\tan \theta_0 = \frac {v_{0y}}{v_{0x}}[/math]

and the x component of the initial velocity is

[math] v_{0x} = v_0 \cos \theta_0 [/math]

plugging those in, you get

 

[math] y= (\tan \theta_0)x - \frac {g}{2(v_0 \cos \theta_0)^2} x^2[/math]

 

you can see [math]a[/math] and [math]b[/math] pretty clearly like that i think

 

hopefully this helps... first time i used latex... maybe it'll get less annoying when i get used to it

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