Projectile Motion (Displacement and Velocity vector)

AI Thread Summary
A projectile is fired at 50 m/s at a 60-degree angle, and the discussion focuses on calculating the velocity and displacement vectors at t = 1.0 seconds. The initial vertical velocity is calculated as 43.3 m/s, while the horizontal component is determined to be 25 m/s. The correct velocity vector combines both components, resulting in a magnitude of 33.5 m/s at an angle of 64.6 degrees. Displacement is calculated as 38.4 meters, with the angle needing to be clarified. The key takeaway is that the horizontal velocity remains constant, while the vertical component is affected by gravity.
SS2006
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hey guys, i have this question I am diong, i got allt he answers but there's one prob

Question:

A projectile is fired at 50 m/s and 60 degrees along a level surface.

a) Find the velocity and displacement VECTORS at t = 1.0 s

i used v2 = v1 + at
v2 = 43.3 + (-9.8) (1)
v2 = 33.5 m/s
thats the velocity at 1 second

now displacement i used
d = v1t + 1/2 at squared
i got y = 43.3 (1) + 1/2 -10 (1) squared
to get
displacement = 38.4 meters

ofcourse the y velocity i got it from : 50 sin 60 = 43.3 m/s and x velocity 50cos60 = 25 m/s as you know

but teh teacer said those aer right numbers but he ased for VECTORS so he wants 33.5 and an angle beside it i assume, i am lost now, i need help finding the displacement and velocity VECTORS :D
thanks guys!

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i posted this in the other forum too , didnt know which ones more right lol thanks, but need it soon
 
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SS2006 said:
a) Find the velocity and displacement VECTORS at t = 1.0 s

i used v2 = v1 + at
v2 = 43.3 + (-9.8) (1)
v2 = 33.5 m/s
thats the velocity at 1 second
That's just the y-component of the velocity. You need to combine this with the x-component to get the correct velocity vector.

Similar comments apply for displacement.
 
ok that's what i don't know how to do :( can you give me instructions, thanks brother :)
 
actually i think i get it
 
got the answers :)

just checking

33.5 and 64.6 degrees for velocity

displacement is 38.4 and 58.4 degree
 
SS2006 said:
just checking

33.5 and 64.6 degrees for velocity
No. As I said before, the 33.5 is just the y-component of the velocity. What's the x-component? What's the magnitude? What's the angle of the velocity vector?
 
i just said 64.6 degrees :D
so
33.5 m/s then there's that angle thingy and i put 64.6 degrees in it
right
 
Answer the questions in my last post.
 
Doc Al said:
No. As I said before, the 33.5 is just the y-component of the velocity. What's the x-component? What's the magnitude? What's the angle of the velocity vector?
y comp: 33.5
x comp: 15.2
magnitude: you mean direction?
angle: 64.6 degrees

he said he wants the answer as a vector, can you please make this easier on me and tell me what the forma tof a vector is :D

os (x,y)?

or
33.5 then <64.6 degrees

or (x,y) then < 64.6 degrees

got to sleep soon and the asnwer is due 2morrow, thanks!
 
  • #10
SS2006 said:
y comp: 33.5
OK
x comp: 15.2
No. v_x = 50 \cos (60)
magnitude: you mean direction?
No, I mean magnitude. If you have the components, use the Pythagorean theorem to find the magnitude.
angle: 64.6 degrees
This is wrong since your x-comp is wrong.

he said he wants the answer as a vector, can you please make this easier on me and tell me what the forma tof a vector is :D
One way is to give a magnitude and a direction. (You can also express it as components, but I suggest magnitude and direction.)
 
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  • #11
isn't the X usually cos 60, not sin60?
also he wants it for the FIRST second, t = 1
so 50cos60 is initial, that's why i got 15, for t = 1 seconds
 
Last edited:
  • #12
SS2006 said:
isn't the X usually cos 60, not sin60?
also he wants it for the FIRST second, t = 1
so 50cos60 is initial, that's why i got 15, for t = 1 seconds
You are right about v_x = 50 \cos (60)--that's what I meant to write. But since \cos (60) = 0.5, v_x = 25, not 15.
 
  • #13
true
i got 15 casue i did
v2 = v1 + at
so 25 - 10 (1) cause he wants 1 second
is 15, as the x displacement
did the same thing with Y and u said its correct
im confused :(
 
  • #14
Only the vertical direction is accelerated (gravity acts down, not sideways). The horizontal speed remains constant.
 
  • #15
goddd no wonder i got 9/10
'mechanical error'
lol i wish u told me yesteryda
thanks bro
case closed :D
 
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