Calculating Bullet Trajectory Distance at 30° Angle

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the bullet trajectory distance when shot at an initial velocity of 600 m/s at a 30-degree angle, assuming no air resistance. The horizontal and vertical components of the initial velocity are determined using trigonometric functions: the horizontal component is 600cos(30) and the vertical component is 600sin(30). The total time of flight is calculated to be 60 seconds, leading to a range of approximately 31176.91 meters using the formula x = vt.

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Homework Statement


A bullet is shot at initial velocity of 600m/s at an angle of 30 degrees. How far will it travel before landing? (Assume no air resistance)
v=600m/s
a=9.8m/s^2
t=?
distance=?


Homework Equations



x=x0+v0t+1/2at^2


The Attempt at a Solution



I'm stuck on this one. I can calculate its distance shot straight up, or from a level surface and I can calculate its time shot straight up or from a level surface. The angle is throwing me off. Does this have something to do with a cosine of 30 degrees?
 
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Yep :wink: To start, split the motion into horizontal and vertical components.
 
Okay. The horizontal component at 30 degrees is = 600cos30? And the vertical component is 600sin30? What now?
 
Robert Alan said:
Okay. The horizontal component at 30 degrees is = 600cos30? And the vertical component is 600sin30? What now?

Use the vertical components to find the total time taken for the motion


x=x_0 + v_0t - \frac{1}{2}gt^2
 
Okay. So I get x=300t-0.5t^2 (For this problem we assume g=10m/s^2). At 30 seconds it will attain a height of 4500. I got this by putting y=300t-5t^2 in my calculator and finding the maximum. Now I know how high it goes and how long it is in the air. Now what do I do to find the range of it?
 
Use the horizontal velocity to find out how far the bullet travels during the time it is in the air.
 
Robert Alan said:
Okay. So I get x=300t-0.5t^2 (For this problem we assume g=10m/s^2). At 30 seconds it will attain a height of 4500. I got this by putting y=300t-5t^2 in my calculator and finding the maximum. Now I know how high it goes and how long it is in the air. Now what do I do to find the range of it?

When the bullet hits the ground, the displacement is zero, so y=0 and find t.
 
Oh snap! So I got 30sec at the max time, double it because the rise and fall are symmetrical. That gives 60sec. Then using x=vt or x=600cos30(60) I got 31176.91 meters! Is that right?
 
that should be correct.
 
  • #10
Thanks so much for the help! I'm starting to see things now in terms of vectors. Very interesting! :)
 
  • #11
Robert Alan said:
Okay. So I get x=300t-0.5t^2 (For this problem we assume g=10m/s^2). At 30 seconds it will attain a height of 4500. I got this by putting y=300t-5t^2 in my calculator and finding the maximum. Now I know how high it goes and how long it is in the air. Now what do I do to find the range of it?

I am pretty bad at physics so I am trying to follow the problem but I get stuck here. I thought that v0=600m/s. How come you wrote 300? Is it because v0 is m/s while gravity is m/s2?
 
  • #12
MLeszega said:
I am pretty bad at physics so I am trying to follow the problem but I get stuck here. I thought that v0=600m/s. How come you wrote 300? Is it because v0 is m/s while gravity is m/s2?

Vertically for x=x0 +v0t-(1/2)gt2

v0 is the vertical component of the initial velocity.
 
  • #13
rock.freak667 said:
Vertically for x=x0 +v0t-(1/2)gt2

v0 is the vertical component of the initial velocity.

So v0 = 600sin(30) for the vertical component and 600cos(30) for the horizontal component?
 
  • #14
MLeszega said:
So v0 = 600sin(30) for the vertical component and 600cos(30) for the horizontal component?

yes.
 
  • #15
rock.freak667 said:
yes.

Ahh, ty very much!
 

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