Circular and Projectile Motion

Circular and Projectile Motion

Assessment

Flashcard

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Hard

Created by

Barbara White

FREE Resource

Student preview

quiz-placeholder

16 questions

Show all answers

1.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Vector Noun

[vek-ter]

Back

Vector


A physical quantity that possesses both magnitude, indicating its size or length, and a specific direction in space.

Example: This diagram shows an object in circular motion. The arrows, or vectors, represent its velocity (tangent to the circle) and acceleration (towards the center).
Media Image

2.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Vector Components Noun

[vek-ter kom-poh-nents]

Back

Vector Components


The parts of a vector that are projected along the axes of a coordinate system, such as x and y.

Example: This diagram shows how a single vector (V), representing something like velocity, can be split into two parts: a horizontal component (Vx) and a vertical component (Vy).
Media Image

3.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Magnitude Noun

[mag-ni-tood]

Back

Magnitude


The size, amount, or length of a vector quantity, which is always a non-negative scalar value.

Example: A speedometer shows speed, which is the magnitude (amount) of an object's velocity. The number the needle points to represents the magnitude of its motion.
Media Image

4.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Resultant Vector Noun

[ri-zuhl-tnt vek-ter]

Back

Resultant Vector


The single vector that represents the sum of two or more individual vectors acting on an object.

Example: Adding two vectors (A and B) head-to-tail gives a single combined vector, called the resultant vector (R), which shows the overall effect.
Media Image

5.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Projectile Noun

[pro-jek-tahyl]

Back

Projectile


An object that is thrown or launched into the air and is subject only to the force of gravity.

Example: An object, like this soccer ball, launched into the air follows a curved path called a trajectory because of gravity's downward pull.
Media Image

6.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Projectile Motion Noun

[pro-jek-tahyl moh-shun]

Back

Projectile Motion


The motion of an object thrown into the air, which follows a curved path due to gravitational acceleration.

Example: A cannonball fired horizontally follows a curved path because its forward motion combines with the constant downward pull of gravity.
Media Image

7.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Free-fall Noun

[free-fawl]

Back

Free-fall


The motion of an object where gravity is the only significant force acting upon it, causing constant downward acceleration.

Example: An apple detaches from a branch and falls straight down, showing its motion is only influenced by the downward pull of gravity.
Media Image

Create a free account and access millions of resources

Create resources

Host any resource

Get auto-graded reports

Google

Continue with Google

Email

Continue with Email

Classlink

Continue with Classlink

Clever

Continue with Clever

or continue with

Microsoft

Microsoft

Apple

Apple

Others

Others

Already have an account?