Calculating a Tennis Player's Ball Speed

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
4 replies · 2K views
bd24
Messages
5
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


a tennis player standing 12.3 m from the net hits the ball at 3° above the horizontal. to clear the net the ball must rise at least 0.33m. if the ball just clears the net at the apex of its trajectory, how fast was the ball moving when it left the racket?

my answer was found by the equation u^2/2g = d (0.33m)
so 0.33m x 19.6 ms^2 = 6.47 ms
the square root of 6.47 ms
= 2.54 ms

Is this right?
 
on Phys.org
Hi bd24

You found the initial vertical velocity, not the initial velocity (which I think the question is asking)
 
The ball does have to move at that speed upwards, but the ball left the racket 3 degrees above the horizontal. The speed of the ball was a lot faster than 2.54 ms. How is speed in the Y direction related to the overall speed.
 
hmmm, so now i have the speed of the ball in the vertical, is it possible to use trig to solve for the horizontal speed? like 2.54/sin(3°) = 48.5 ms?
ps. thanks for all the help
 
Yes, that's the answer