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The physical formulas that govern the trajectory of an object that is thrown in space are used in the flash script. The horizontalvelocity is constant, and the vertical velocity increases whilethe object is falling down, and reduces while it is going up due tothe action of gravity. The object is bounced back when it hits the boundaries.The velocity of the bounced object is affected by the elastic constant of the boundary. The horizontal and vertical velocities can be changedby dragging and throwing the ball. The elastic constants of the boundaries can also be selected. By Achyut Veluvali
A little springy spider critter that crawls down the screen. Head and feet are draggable. (my first post, owes a debt to Keith Peters) By gotelse
Cube floats weightlessly in a no-gravity simulation. User can 'throw' the ball any direction and watch it float. User can change gravity variables to create an environment with weight. By Sphere
A small program i made to look at energy waves and the way they interfere with each other. By Andrew Ardill
An elastic button that describes it's own hit area through actionscript. Button scales up in an elestic fashion when hovered over and springs back to it's original size when the mouse is moved away. By Owen Sutton
The movie illustrates the damped oscillation of a spring mass system. By Achyut Veluvali
Scripted rubber physics simulating a bouncy ball. Contact us if you'd like any other types of realistic effects! :) By Steven Mikkelson
Single plane mass balance program for rotating machinery. Designed with PocketPCs in mind. The code is tight and well documented. Visit my site for more stuff like this. By Steve Young
A simulation of the effects of gravity, drag and elasticity on a 2D ball. By Sam Salisbury
This is best if viewed with headphones or a good sound system. It's an experiment in balance. When the ball hits the left, it plays in the left speaker. Right, plays in the right speaker. The floor and the ceiling...it depends on where it is. That's the neat part. Makes a great active desktop. By Chris Jones

