Solving for Time Taken to Slide Down Roof

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The discussion revolves around calculating the time taken for a ball to slide down a roof, starting from a height of 12.5 meters and rolling a distance of 8.14 meters at a 40-degree angle. The calculations provided yield a final velocity of 9.84 m/s and an acceleration of 3.39 m/s², resulting in a time of 2.90 seconds for the ball to slide down. However, a key point raised is the distinction between "rolling" and "sliding," suggesting that the problem may have been misinterpreted. If the ball is indeed rolling, additional information about its properties, such as whether it is solid or hollow, is necessary for accurate calculations. The conversation highlights the importance of clarifying the type of motion involved in physics problems.
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Homework Statement


a ball started at a height of 12.5 meters and rolled to the edge of a roof which is at 7 meters. Using a^2+b^2=c^2 we know it rolled a distance of 8.14 meters on the roof because it rolled a horizontal distance of 6m and a vertical distance of 5.5m. Find the time it rolled down the roof. The roof makes a 40deg angle with the horizontal and coeff of friction is .388.

Homework Equations


Potential E=KE+Ffriction
mg*distance*sin(theta)=.5mv^2+(coeff of friction)*mgcos(theta)*distance down roof
acceleration=g*sin(theta)-g*(coeff. of friction)*cos(theta)
V=Vo+at

The Attempt at a Solution



8.14*g*sin(40)=.5v^2+.388*g*cos(40)*(8.14)
v=9.84m/s

a=g*sin40)-g*.388cos(40)
a=3.39m/s^2

9.84=3.39t
t=2.90 seconds
 
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Vanessa23 said:
a ball started at a height of 12.5 meters and rolled to the edge of a roof ...
... we know it rolled a distance of 8.14 meters on the roof because it rolled a horizontal distance of 6m and a vertical distance of 5.5m. Find the time it rolled down the roof. ...

What you have solved is for sliding down the roof whereas, the question has reiterated the term rolling. I think, question has been manipulated, in your own words!

The attempt is correct, method-wise, if it is sliding. So, have you written 'sliding' incorrectly?
If it is indeed 'rolling', one information is missing: information about the ball? Assuming a spherical ball (as most of them are), is it solid or hollow? Have you missed that?
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
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