Calculating Takeoff Speed for an Olympic Long Jumper

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a kinematics problem involving an Olympic long jumper who takes off at an angle and travels a specified horizontal distance before landing. The goal is to determine the takeoff speed of the jumper based on the given parameters.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the equations of motion for the jumper, questioning the application of the vertical and horizontal components of velocity. There are attempts to clarify the conditions under which the jumper lands and how to relate the two unknowns, takeoff speed and time of flight.

Discussion Status

The conversation is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the equations involved. Some guidance has been offered regarding the simultaneous equations that can be set up, but there is still confusion about handling the two unknowns in the problem.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about the relationship between the variables involved, particularly in terms of how to isolate one variable when both takeoff speed and time are unknown. There is also mention of the constraints of the problem setup, including the angle of takeoff and the distance traveled.

pinky2468
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Kinematics in Two Dimensions??

Hi, I was wondering if anyone could give a little help on this problem. I can't figure out where to begin!
An Olympic long jumper leaves the ground at an angle of 23 degrees and travels through the air for a horizontal distance of 8.7m before landing. What is the take off speed of the jumper?
Thanks!
 
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Let x be horizontal and y be vertical and suppose the jumper takes off from the origin (0, 0) at t = 0. Then
[tex]x = v_0 \cos( \theta) t[/tex]
and
[tex]y = v_0 \sin(\theta) t - \frac{1}{2}g t^2[/tex]
so, first, find the time at which he/she lands (y = 0) and use that value of t in the first equation to find [itex]v_0[/itex]
 
Why is y=0 and for the y equation given is V=0?
 
pinky2468 said:
Why is y=0 and for the y equation given is V=0?

y=0 on landing because he is landing on the ground which where you are measuring from!

No, v0 is the same in both equations. (It is the sine and cosine that distinguish vertical and horizontal speeds.) That means that what Tide suggested isn't quite right- you can't "find the time at which he/she lands (y = 0) and use that value of t in the first equation to find v0".

What you can do is use the length of the jump given and solve the two simultaneous equations
[tex]v_0cos(23)t= 8.7[/tex] and
[tex]v_0sin(23)t- \frac{g}{2}t^2= 0[/tex]
for both t and v0.
 
I'm sorry, I feel retarded but I still don't understand how you can have to unknown variables in one problem. If I don't know Vo or time how do I even solve the first equation?
 
you can always remove one variable by substituting it as something else...

for instance, you can use t = x/(cos23 *v)
 
Last edited:
HallsofIvy said:
That means that what Tide suggested isn't quite right

Picky, picky! :smile:

Obviously, when I say "solve for" I meant solve for t in terms of [itex]v_0[itex].[/itex][/itex]
 

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