When you are learning to juggle two balls, one in your right hand and the other
ID: 1790793 • Letter: W
Question
When you are learning to juggle two balls, one in your right hand and the other in your left hand, you are told to throw the second ball when the first ball has reached its highest point. When you catch the first ball, you are told to throw the first ball back to your right hand when the second ball has reached its highest point. What physical reason best explains this instruction?
The juggler clearly doesn’t know physics because we have no way of knowing what will happen to the ball after it reaches its highest point.
This will give you the most time between catching and throwing each ball.
That is the place where the first ball has the least acceleration so the second ball can accelerate more.
There’s no particularly good time to throw either ball, the instructor just has to make something up to sell his book.
The juggler clearly doesn’t know physics because we have no way of knowing what will happen to the ball after it reaches its highest point.
This will give you the most time between catching and throwing each ball.
That is the place where the first ball has the least acceleration so the second ball can accelerate more.
There’s no particularly good time to throw either ball, the instructor just has to make something up to sell his book.
Explanation / Answer
This will give you the most time between catching and throwing each ball.
this will give proper time to the juggler
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