Find Maximum Elevation of Test Rocket

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The test rocket problem involves two phases: during acceleration and after the motor shuts off. Initially, the rocket reaches a height of 160 meters with a velocity of 80 m/s after 4 seconds of acceleration at 20 m/s². Once the motor stops, the rocket continues to coast upward until it reaches a maximum elevation of approximately 487 meters, calculated using projectile motion equations. Additionally, a question about horizontal projectile motion highlights confusion regarding the increasing distance between two packages dropped from a plane, which occurs due to their constant horizontal velocity while falling under gravity. Understanding these concepts is crucial for solving both vertical and horizontal motion problems effectively.
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This problem seems simple but I'm just not getting the correct answer, please help thank you.

A test rocket is fired straigt up from rest with a net accerleration of 20m/s^2. After 4 seconds the motor turns off, but the rocket continues to coast upward. What maximum elevation does the rocket reach?

This is what I get

X_0=0, a=20m/s^2, t=4 s

1/2(20m/s^2)(4 s)^2=160m (the correct answer is 487m :cry: )
 
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You need to think of it as 2 separate problems.

1. Rocket under the stated acceleration

2. Rocket after acceleration stops.

The final conditions of problem 1 (i.e. height and velocity) are the initial conditions for problem 2.
 
Problem 1
x=160m and v=80m/s

Problem 2
x_0=160m, v_0=80m/s, a=?
if it stopped accelerating, I would assume that the acceleration would be decreasing as the rocket coasted upward. Would this be correct?
 
So far, so good. You have the initial conditions for problem #2. Now, you need the equation of motion (in the vertical direction) for a projectile with initial conditions of distance and velocity. You must have been given such an equation or taught how to derive it using F=ma.
 
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Thank you. This is what I got

160m-[0-(80m/s)^2/2(9.8m/s^2)]=486.5m

Also, I had another question about horizontal projectile motion.
Why does the distance of two packages steadily increase as they fall out of a plane going at constant speed.

I thought the distance would remain constant between the two packages as they fall when air friction is negligible. I can't make sense of it.
 
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