Dimensional analysis of this equation

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uchicago2012
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Homework Statement


In the equation below, x and x0 are distances in meters, t is the time in seconds, and v0 is a speed in meters per second. Find the units of a.
x-x0 = v0(t) + (1/2)a(t^2)
Find the dimensions (or units) of v0 that will make this equation dimensionally correct.


The Attempt at a Solution


So I found that a is acceleration, or m/s^2, but the last question confuses me- possibly I don't understand the wording? When I went through the equation and subbed in the units, I got:

m-m = (m/s)(s) + (1/2)(m/s^2)(s^2) which comes down to
m= m + (1/2)m = (some number)m

So what exactly is the problem with the units or dimensions or whatnot? Or is the point for us to realize there isn't one? Or perhaps I found a's units wrong.

Thanks in advance for any help.
 
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The last question is "Find the dimensions (or units) of v0 that will make this equation dimensionally correct." They just want you to find the units of v0.

Why would you think you might have found the units of a wrong? What else could they possibly be?
 


But didn't they give us the units of v0? As in meters per second?

Sorry if this is a stupid question, but I don't understand why they're asking for what I think they gave us.
 


Oh yeah, they do... I'm not sure why they do that either. Maybe whoever wrote the question just wasn't paying attention.
 


Uh, I think so? Otherwise the first term wouldn't be in meters, which would be a problem. Wouldn't it? Ugh.