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Introductory Physics Homework Help
Solving an Equation: x = vo t + ½ a t2
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[QUOTE="BvU, post: 4949593, member: 499340"] Well, if we go through "[B]all variables and given/known data[/B]" in "problem statement" and "relevant equations", we see u, d, x, v[SUB]0[/SUB], a, t and v. In your attempt at solution, you have ¼ d = v[SUB]o[/SUB] t + ½ a t[SUP]2[/SUP] . Correctly, if I assume v[SUB]o[/SUB] is u . You don't use the second relevant equation. Why not? What does it mean ? What is v ? All this is for the ¼ d case. What changes for the d case ? And what stays the same ? [/QUOTE]
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Introductory Physics Homework Help
Solving an Equation: x = vo t + ½ a t2
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