course Phy 241 ??????I|???????T?w?Student Name:
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18:10:32 `q001. Note that this assignment contains 3 questions. . A projectile has an initial velocity of 12 meters/second, entirely in the horizontal direction. After falling to a level floor three meters lower than the initial position, what will be the magnitude and direction of the projectile's velocity vector?
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RESPONSE --> First we can use `ds=2a`dt^2, `dt is .39. We can find the average downward velocity by taking 3m and dividing it by .39s to give 7.69m/s. If in the x direction the velocity is 12 m/s. We can use these as components of the velocity vector. So x^2=(-7.69)^2+(12)^2=14.25m/s.
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19:19:12 `q002. A projectile is given an initial velocity of 20 meters/second at an angle of 30 degrees above horizontal, at an altitude of 12 meters above a level surface. How long does it take for the projectile to reach the level surface?
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RESPONSE --> ok i used the wrong equation, vf^2=2a`ds. q2 we can use .5(9.8)(x^2)=12 and find `dt to be .64s
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19:20:39 To determine the time required to reach the level surface we need only analyze the vertical motion of the projectile. The acceleration in the vertical direction will be 9.8 meters/second ^ 2 in the downward direction, and the displacement will be 12 meters in the downward direction. Taking the initial velocity to be upward into the right, we situate our x-y coordinate system with the y direction vertically upward and the x direction toward the right. Thus the initial velocity in the vertical direction will be equal to the y component of the initial velocity, which is v0y = 20 meters/second * sine (30 degrees) = 10 meters/second. Characterizing the vertical motion by v0 = 10 meters/second, `ds = -12 meters (`ds is downward while the initial velocity is upward, so a positive initial velocity implies a negative displacement), and a = -9.8 meters/second ^ 2, we see that we can find the time `dt required to reach the level surface using either the third equation of motion `ds = v0 `dt + .5 a `dt^2, or we can use the fourth equation vf^2 = v0^2 + 2 a `ds to find vf after which we can easily find `dt. To avoid having to solve a quadratic in `dt we choose to start with the fourth equation. We obtain vf = +-`sqrt ( (10 meters/second) ^ 2 + 2 * (-9.8 meters/second ^ 2) * (-12 meters) ) = +-18.3 meters/second, approximately. Since we know that the final velocity will be in the downward direction, we choose vf = -18.3 meters/second. We can now find the average velocity in the y direction. Averaging the initial 10 meters/second with the final -18.3 meters/second, we see that the average vertical velocity is -4.2 meters/second. Thus the time required for the -12 meters displacement is `dt = `ds / vAve = -12 meters/(-4.2 meters/second) = 2.7 seconds.
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RESPONSE --> ok so the initial velocity was not in the horizontal direction it was a vector
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19:36:43 `q003. What will be the horizontal distance traveled by the projectile in the preceding exercise, from the initial instant to the instant the projectile strikes the flat surface.
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RESPONSE --> horizontal velocity is found by 20m/s*cos 30 which is 17.32 m/s. Multiply this by time of 2.7 46.71m
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19:37:21 The horizontal velocity of the projectile will not change so if we can find this horizontal velocity, knowing that the projectile travels for 2.7 seconds we can easily find the horizontal range. The horizontal velocity of the projectile is simply the x component of the velocity: horizontal velocity = 20 meters/second * cosine (30 degrees) = 17.3 meters/second. Moving at this rate for 2.7 seconds the projectile travels distance 17.3 meters/second * 2.7 seconds = 46 meters, approximately.
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RESPONSE --> ok
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