Calculating Angle for Accurate Shooting

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the angle required for a bullet to hit a target 130 m away, considering the effects of gravity on the bullet's trajectory. The problem involves concepts from kinematics and projectile motion.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the time taken for the bullet to reach the target and the gravitational acceleration acting on it. They explore the relationship between the distance fallen and the distance to the target, questioning how to apply trigonometric principles to find the angle of aim.

Discussion Status

Participants have provided various calculations and hints, including time of flight and gravitational effects. There is an ongoing exploration of how to visualize the problem using diagrams and trigonometric relationships, but no consensus has been reached on the final angle calculation.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the assumption that the bullet is shot horizontally and are considering the effects of gravity on its trajectory. There is a mention of needing to clarify the formula for distance fallen due to acceleration.

mathcrzy
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A hunter aims directly at a target (on the same level) 130 m away.

(a) If the bullet leaves the gun at a speed of 300 m/s, by how much will it miss the target?
.9 m

(b) At what angle should the gun be aimed so the target will be hit?
_____°
 
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1. How much time does the bullet take to reach the target, assuming its speed is constant?

2. What is the gravitational acceleration acting upon the bullet over this time?

3. What is the formula for distance dropped due to constant acceleration and zero initial velocity?

4. How far does the bullet fall due to the acceleration over the time of travel?

5. Calculate the tangent for the distance fallen vs. the distance to the target.
 
1. .43 seconds

2. 9.8m/s^2

3. ?

4. .9m in 130 m

5. ?
 
Y and X components of motion here are separate things, so in number 3 u treat the bullet falling as a separate part, where a=g. (You already have T, so just look for the formula that works) basically what u did to obtain number 4, just that you write your formula and variables down for Y component of motion.

5.I believe is trigonometry, SOH,CAH,TOA. The tangent of distance fallen vs the distance travelled, is visualized much clearer if you do a diagram, you know that distance travel is a straight parallel line on the X axis, and distance fallen is a distance in the Y axis, if you draw this you will get a right triangle. There you can calculate the angle that the bullet falls, using Angle = Tan Y/X (TOA). If you know that the bullet shot at 0 degrees will fall Y distance at a X degree angle, what would happen if you shoot it at a +X angle?

(draw diagrams, it makes it much easier to visualize)
 
i figured out the hypotenuse=130.0031153. now how do i figure out the angle?
 
Hints:

What does at2/2 equal?

Also, remember sin(Angle)=opposite/hypotenuse.
 

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