Solve Physics Free Fall Question: Height of Building

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a person free falling from a building of height h and determining the height based on the distance fallen in the last second of the fall. The specific condition is that the person falls a distance of h/4 during the last second of the fall.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between distance fallen and time for a falling object, with some suggesting equations of motion and others proposing to derive expressions for time and height based on given conditions.

Discussion Status

Several participants have offered different approaches to relate the height of the building to the time of fall and the distance fallen. There are multiple interpretations of the problem, and various equations are being explored without reaching a consensus on a single method.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the constraint of not plugging in numerical values until the end and are exploring the implications of the last second of fall in relation to the total height.

Corneo
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I'm really bad at physics so please excuse me. But I would like some help on this question. I would like to be able to solve it without plugging in any numbers until the end.

If a person steps off a building of height h, and free falls on the way down to the bottom. What is the height of the building if he falls a distance of h/4 in his last 1 second of fall.

Any ideas?
 
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What's the relationship between distance fallen and time for a falling object?
 
Is it[tex]t=\frac {2 \Delta x}{ v+v_0}[/tex]?

Then all I have to solve is
[tex]\frac {h}{4} = \frac {1}{2}g \left(\frac {2 \Delta x}{ v+v_0} - 1 \right)^2 + v_0 \left(\frac {2 \Delta x}{ v+v_0}-1 \right)+h[/tex]

Where [tex]v_0=0, \Delta x = \frac {3h}{4}[/tex]. Am I correct?
 
Your basic problem is:

[tex]x(t) = - \frac {g t^2} 2 + V_0 t + X_0[/tex]

[tex]V_0 =0[/tex]
[tex]X_0 =h[/tex]

so you get an equation of motion as:
[tex]x(t) = - \frac {g t^2} 2 + h[/tex]

Solve for t when x=0, this will give you an expression, call it T, for the time of the fall in terms of g and h. Now you know that

[tex]x(T-1) = \frac h 4[/tex]

use this in your equation of motion to find h.
 
Oh I see, ok thanks a lot.
 
Alternatively you can use the four basic constant acceleration equations in a simultaneous equation i think.
 
You could also solve this way:

let t = time it takes to fall.

since x = .5gt^2 (one of the general motion equations)

h = .5g(t^2)

.75h = .5g(t - 1)^2 (since time will be t-1 when it has fallen .75h)

just subtract one equation from another to get .25h = .5(t^2) - .5(t - 1)^2...and simplify to further get...

... h/4 = 2g(2t - 1)...multiply by 4 to get:

h = 2g(2t - 1)...and set this back equal to:

.5g(t^2) = 2g(2t - 1)...this ends up becoming t^2 - 8t + 4 = 0...and then solve for t with the quadratic. Now that you know t, you can easily find h.
 

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