Find Velocity of Mass in 12 Hours

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The project involves measuring the effects of height and velocity by dropping steel balls into clay and analyzing the resulting craters. Mistakes were made in measuring units, mixing inches and feet, leading to potentially inaccurate data. To correct this, it's essential to convert all measurements to feet and recalculate the velocity using the formula v = √2gh. After determining the velocity, the depth of each impact crater can be calculated with d = v²t. This approach should help validate whether the crater depths increase as theoretically expected.
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Finding Velocity of Mass!

Hi!
This is a last resort for a project that has begun to go sour. We have a project due in roughly 12 hours comprised off of an experiment that Emilie Du Chatelet held. We are measuring the effects of height & velocity by dropping steel balls, at one foot intervals, into a one and a half inch thick piece of clay.

Then measuring the depth of the impact crater with a ruler and repeating the process eight times; corresponding to eight feet. Then timing the distance for the ball to fall to the related foot. (One foot, Two Foot, Etc..)

We’re analyzing the data and came upon a couple grave mistakes. We’ve accidentally measured with inches and feet. (Blame group projects). Overall, I believe our data is completely wrong, because in theory the depth should increase up to four times, but it hasn’t.

Any ideas how we can resurrect this in time? Our main man on the project just walked out the door in frustration.
 
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Fortunately, there is still time to fix this project. The first step is to convert inches to feet and recalculate the velocity of the steel ball. To do this, you will need to use the formula v = √2gh, where v is the velocity, g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s2), h is the height of the drop, and the √2 is a conversion factor. Once you have the velocity for each drop, you can then calculate the depth of each impact crater by using the formula d = v²t, where d is the depth of the crater, v is the velocity, and t is the time it took for the ball to fall. Finally, you can use this information to compare the depths of each of the impact craters and see if they increase four-fold as expected. Good luck!
 
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