Calculating Speed of Falling Banana - Just Before it Hits Ground?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the speed of a falling banana just before it hits the ground, given its weight of 1N and a fall distance of 3 meters. The key concepts involve the conservation of energy, where the potential energy (PE) at the start equals the kinetic energy (KE) just before impact. The potential energy is calculated as 3J, leading to a maximum kinetic energy of the same value. By applying the kinetic energy formula, the speed is determined to be approximately 7.74 m/s. The calculations confirm that understanding the relationship between potential and kinetic energy is crucial for solving such problems.
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Calculating Speed of Falling Banana - "Just Before" it Hits Ground?

Homework Statement



"A monkey drops a banana. Its weight is 1N. It falls 3 metres to the ground. What is the speed of the falling banana just before it hits the ground?"

Homework Equations



Not sure, but I'm guessing I need to calculate the kinetic energy the banana gains (which was 3J) and the change in GPE (which was also 3J).

The Attempt at a Solution



My textbook says the answer is 7.8 m/s, but I have no idea why. As I've said above, I've worked out the change in GPE and kinetic energy the banana gains, but why is the answer 7.8 m/s and how are you supposed to arrive at this solution?
 
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before the banana hits the ground the velocity is max, which means that the kinetic energy is max so total energy at the moment is kinetic energy .. and at the point just before the monkey drops the banana the potential energy is max with value = mgh=1*3=3J so your total energy is 3J , thus the max. kinetic energy is 3J and you know that the kinetic energy = 0.5*m*v^2 (here m =0.1 kg) then substituting you will find that v =7.74 m/s
 


thebigstar25 is correct, this is all about Conservation of Energy. Potential Energy at the start is equal to the Kinetic Energy at the bottom. And since you know the Force and Acceleration, you can figure out Mass. (F=ma) Then just plug it into the equation for PE (PE=mgh).
 
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