Cricket ball / projectile question

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The discussion centers on a physics problem involving the trajectory of a cricket ball bowled horizontally from a height of 2.3 meters. The user successfully calculated the time it takes for the ball to fall 2.3 meters as approximately 0.68 seconds. However, for the second part of the question regarding the ball's rise to 0.71 meters after bouncing, the user misapplied the equations of motion by not considering the horizontal distance of 20 meters and the additional factors affecting the ball's velocity after the bounce. Other participants suggest that the user needs to incorporate the horizontal distance into their calculations, as the ball's trajectory over the stumps is crucial to solving the problem correctly. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding both vertical and horizontal components in projectile motion.
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I am trying to repeat a quesion I had got wrong about a cricket ball. The question is

"A cricketer bowls a ball from a height of 2.3m. The ball leaves his hand horizontally with a velocity u. After bouncing once, it just passes over the stumps at the top of its bounce. The stumps are 0.71m high and are situated 20m from where the bowler releases the ball.
a) show that from the moment it is released the ball takes about 0.7s to fall 2.3m
b) How long does it take the ball to rise 0.71m after bouncing?"

Part a I'm ok with. I used v^2 = u^2 +2ax using
a = -9.81m/s2
x = 2.3m
u = 0m/s
to find v = -6.72 m/s

i then used v = u +at
to give t = (v-u)/a = 0.68s

For part b I thought I could use a similar approach saying that at the top of it's bounce the vertical component of the velocity will be zero and the only acceleration is due to gravity. So using v^2 = u^2 +2ax
with v= 0m/s
a = -9.81m/s2
x = 0.71
I got u = 3.73 m/s

and substituing that into t =(v-u)/a, t = 0.38s
unfortunately this was wrong and I got 0 out of a possible 3 marks.

Please can anyone help me with where I am going wrong? The only thing I can think of is that there is some additional acceleration in the vertical direction (from the bounce??) but I don't know how to work this out. If you can point me in the right direction that would be brilliant.
 
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I don't see anything wrong with your work. Your answers look correct to me.
 
Thank you!
 
Hey I’m not too sure, but wouldn’t the x value in the second vertical part be larger as it travels over the wickets, it says that it is at its max height over the wickets, so all that that is saying is that its max bounce height is 20 meters from where the ball was released
 
oh wait sorry I am wrong
 
no wait I am sort of right! lol yea u can't sub V=0 when x=0.71, because the ball travels over the wickets!
 
lol so X > 0.71. when V= 0.
 
I says it 'just' passes over the stumps at the top of its bounce so doesn't that mean the top of the bounce is at 0.71m?
 
yea ok maybe, lol better ask your teacher, lol i kno i would have not got that question right either! id say you would have to include 20m some how because otherwise it wouldn't have been given. lol good luck lol
lol and let me kno please!
 
  • #10
yeh...you have to include that there is 20 m that they ball has to travel because 0.38 s for a ball to travel 20 m is far to fast...i still think it is pretty harsh that you didnt get any marks...
 
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