What is the vertical height between two climbers?

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The discussion revolves around calculating the vertical height between two climbers based on the projectile motion of a first aid kit thrown at an initial velocity of 11 m/s at a 65-degree angle. The climber successfully resolves the initial velocity into horizontal and vertical components, determining that the vertical component (Vy0) is approximately 10 m/s. Using the kinematic equation for vertical motion, they calculate the height to be 5.1 meters when the kit is caught with a vertical speed of zero. The conversation emphasizes the importance of correctly identifying initial velocity components in solving projectile motion problems. Overall, the participants express satisfaction in learning the problem-solving process rather than just obtaining the answer.
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Homework Statement

A rock climber throws a small first aid kit to another climber who is higher up the mountain. The initial velocity of the kit is 11 m/s at an angle of 65 degrees above the horizontal. At the instant when the kit is caught, it is traveling horizontally, so it's vertical speed is zero. What is the vertical height between the 2 climbers.

Initial Velocity=11 m/s
Angle above horizontal=65 degrees
Vertical speed=0

Homework Equations


equations of kinematics


The Attempt at a Solution

 
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Please show some work and effort on one's part.

Initial Velocity=11 m/s

Determine the horizontal and vertical velocity components.

The horizontal velocity is constant if one ignores air resistance. The kit decelerates as it travels vertically.

Refer to -
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/traj.html#tra5
 
Here is what I did. I used the equation y=h=Vy^2 - Voy^2/ 2 (Ay)

Then I used the values I had h=(0m/s)^2 - (11 m/s)^2/ 2 (-9.8m/s^2) = 6.1 meters

The answer is 5.1 meters what did I do wrong
 
vy0 is not 11 m/s.

v0 = 11 m/s.

Resolve v0 into vy0 and vx0

Think about sin and cos of the angle with respect to horizontal.
 
ok Vy0=11 sin 65=10 m/s
and Vx0=11 cos 65=4.6 m/s

Now what do I do
 
Ok so it's h=0 m/s)^2 - 10 m/s) ^2/2 *-9.8 m/s^2=5.1
 
Did I do it right
 
Yes! :cool:
 
Thank you Astronuc. It feels good learning how to solve a problem. Instead of just writing down the answer.
 
  • #10
Thanks!

Thanks so much, I had the same problem. Ironically, I had split it up into components already, just for some reason I hadn't added it into the formula as my VoY, I was still using the old Vo vector.

Thanks!
 
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