Not trying to get involved in this debate, looks hectic enough as it is, just trying to understand the model.
Feel free to get involved is you wish. At least I know you try to understand it even if you might not agree.
If we took, say, a platform on some kind of mechanism that moved up at a constant, fast speed, and placed a ball on top of it, then that ball would be initially trapped on the surface of the platform keeping going up at a constant speed.
Ok, let's use an iron ball just so we don't have any added extras of compression as we would on a football or tennis ball.
Just to make it more clear more than anything else.
Would it be correct to say that if the platform was to quickly decelerate, stop dead or reverse, the ball in question would not leave the surface of the platform but would instead match speed with it at every second?
Let's look at decelerating.
In my mind I believe decelerating can only be a thing immediately after the cut off point of acceleration and it's a massive key thought.
If something is building up a mph and the power is immediately cut, that build up will allow deceleration to happen, which means a forward movement to still happen as ever reducing mph.
In this case we would see the iron ball sit on the platform all the way up and all the way down to the ground.
And if instead the platform was to accelerate up before slowing/stopping/reversing then and only then would the ball leave the surface of the platform and be thrown up?
If the platform accelerates and then the power is cut, it simply decelerates.
If a brake was applied to the platform then the ball would carry on decelerating, meaning it would do a quick small jump but wouldn't significantly show any large vertical gain.
A tennis ball/football would make a bigger gain and I can explain why but we'll deal with the issues first.
And if this is accurate then, companion question to the first situation, how could you tell the difference between the ball keeping to the surface of the platform staying at a dead stop, and the ball decelerating at the same rate as the platform?
It would depend on the mass of the ball being used as to what you could see clearly or marginally or not at all.
However, there is still one more thing to deal with which is the constant velocity.
This is the one where I'm basically arguing the point of, even though it seems to have jumped from the rocket topic. lol
My argument is this.
On that very same platform going up at a constant velocity, it is under a constant energy load that is keeping that platform moving at a stead mph vertically.
The iron ball on the platform is also moving at the same rate, obviously.
If I was to cut the power in a split second to leave that platform attached to nothing, then that platform and the ball stop dead before accelerating back down.
My argument is that it would not move an inch further vertically after power is cut at a constant rate of mph.
Assuming these questions are clear this'll probably be my only post on this topic, thanks in advance!
Hopefully they are clear but if not feel free to ask and also feel free to enter the topic.