Do the two balls meet at the halfway point?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves two balls: one dropped from the top of a building and another thrown upwards from ground level. The objective is to determine whether the balls cross paths at the halfway point of the building, above it, or below it, while considering the effects of their differing initial velocities and acceleration due to gravity.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss using kinematics to analyze the motion of both balls, considering their initial velocities and acceleration. Some question how the differing speeds at the start and end of their trajectories affect the crossing point.

Discussion Status

Participants are exploring the implications of the balls' motions and velocities. Some suggest that the ball thrown upwards, starting with a higher speed, will cross above the halfway point, while others encourage verifying this through mathematical calculations. There is an acknowledgment of the need to set the height of the building as a variable for further analysis.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the absence of specific height information for the building, which complicates direct calculations. The discussion includes suggestions to define the height as a variable to facilitate solving for the crossing point.

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A ball is dropped from rest from the top of a building and strikes the ground with a speed Vf. From ground level, a second ball is thrown straight upward at the same instant that the first ball is dropped. The initial speed of the second ball is Vo=Vf, the same speed with which the first ball will eventually strike the ground. Ignoring air resistance, decide whether the balls cross paths at half the height of the building, above the halfway point, or below the halfway point. Give your reasoning.

Hmm...
I thought of using kinematics to find if both times would be equal to each other when they arrive to halfway x = vt +1/2at^2, but the only difference between the balls would be their direction considering the velocities are similar.
What to do? Ty
 
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Hi LadiesMan,

LadiesMan said:
A ball is dropped from rest from the top of a building and strikes the ground with a speed Vf. From ground level, a second ball is thrown straight upward at the same instant that the first ball is dropped. The initial speed of the second ball is Vo=Vf, the same speed with which the first ball will eventually strike the ground. Ignoring air resistance, decide whether the balls cross paths at half the height of the building, above the halfway point, or below the halfway point. Give your reasoning.

Hmm...
I thought of using kinematics to find if both times would be equal to each other when they arrive to halfway x = vt +1/2at^2, but the only difference between the balls would be their direction considering the velocities are similar.
What to do? Ty

You can definitely use kinematics to find the answer.

But conceptually, think about the fact that one starts out moving slow and speed up, while the other starts out moving fast and slow down. How does that affect the spot where they pass each other?
 


Thanks!

So:

Throwing up: Starts fast and slows down
Dropping: Starts slow and speeds up
In this sense, greater velocity equals greater distance traveled. Therefore the balls should cross each other above the halfway point.

Is that true?
 


LadiesMan said:
Thanks!

So:

Throwing up: Starts fast and slows down
Dropping: Starts slow and speeds up
In this sense, greater velocity equals greater distance traveled. Therefore the balls should cross each other above the halfway point.

Is that true?

That sounds right to me.
 


however, intuition often plays tricks on us, so, just for practice, you should consider doing the maths behind that and find out where exactly they meet, now since you know the fundamental difference between both motions.
 


Thanks!

@above: We are provided with only one value such that a = 9.8m/s^2. Thus, how can we calculate it's location?
 


LadiesMan said:
Thanks!

@above: We are provided with only one value such that a = 9.8m/s^2. Thus, how can we calculate it's location?

You can calculate at what fraction of the height of the building they cross (the halfway mark, 1/10 of the way up, etc.).
 


to think about it, I'm not sure how to prove that the balls would arrive at above the halfway point. any suggestions? possibly using equations?
 


LadiesMan said:
to think about it, I'm not sure how to prove that the balls would arrive at above the halfway point. any suggestions? possibly using equations?


To use equations, just set the height building to be h (or choose a numerical height) and solve the two motions for the time in which they are at the same position (calculating some needed quantities like the final speed of the dropped ball along the way). Once you find that position, you can compare it to the building height to answer the question.
 
  • #10


Hmm, but we don't know the height of the building? :S
 
  • #11


LadiesMan said:
Hmm, but we don't know the height of the building? :S

What I meant was to set the building height to be an unknown variable h, and then solve for the height at which the balls cross.

Then, just as an example, if you found the balls cross at the vertical position y=\frac{1}{4}h then you know that they cross below the midpoint of the building.
 
  • #12


Ight! Thank you! :)
 
  • #13


Glad to help!
 

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