What is the projectile motion equation?

1 Answer
Apr 28, 2015

Basically, any of the kinematic equations works, if you know when to use which equation.

For a projectile shot at an angle, to find time, first consider the first half of the motion. You can set up a table to organize what you have and what you need to figure out which kinematic equation to use.
For example: A child kicks a ball with initial velocity of #15 m/s# at an angle of #30^o# with the horizontal. How long is the ball in the air?

You can start with the table of givens. For time you're going to need the y-component of the velocity.
#v_i rarr 15*sin(30) = 7.5 m/s#
#v_f rarr 0 m/s#
#a rarr -9.8 m/s^2#
#t rarr FIND#
#Delta x rarr unknown#

You can use the kinematic equation #v_f = v_i + at#. Substitute:
#0 = 7.5 +(-9.8)t#
#t = 0.77 s#
REMEMBER that this is only for the first half of the motion, so multiply the calculated time by #2# to find the total time. In this case #2*0.77 = 1.54 s#

So, the moral is, if you can identify what the question is asking for, and you can find the givens, organize them into a table similar to the one I made, and chose the appropriate kinematic equation, you should be fine. Sorry if this was a bit long.