Horizontal Projectile Motion Question

AI Thread Summary
A ball is thrown horizontally from a height of 22.8 m and lands 52.1 m away from the building. The time of flight is calculated to be 2.16 seconds, and the horizontal velocity is constant due to the absence of horizontal forces. The discussion focuses on finding the vertical components of velocity and the initial velocity, with various equations of motion being referenced. Participants clarify that the initial vertical velocity is zero since the ball is thrown horizontally, and they explore different methods to calculate the vertical velocity just before impact. The conversation highlights the confusion around applying the equations of motion for both horizontal and vertical components.
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Horizontal Projectile Motion Question...please help!

1. A ball is thrown horizontally from the top of a building 22.8 m. high. The ball strikes the ground at a point 52.1 m. from the base of the building.
a. Find the time the ball is in motion.
b. Find the initial velocity of the ball.
c. Find the x component of its velocity just before it strikes the ground.
d. Find the y component of its velocity just before it strikes the ground.




2. vx =
dx=52.1
t

vfY
voY = 0
aY = -9.8 (gravity)
dY= -22.8
t




3. I found the time to be 2.16 s., but the rest is tricking me up. The answer to b can't be zero can it? I don't understand that part, and I'm just at a loss for how to find the x and y components. So please...can anybody give me some help here?
 
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You found the time from the vertical free fall?
There are no horizontal forces acting on the ball so the horizontal velocity must be constant. You know how far it went and how long it took so you have horizontal velocity.

You can find the vertical velocity from v^2 + u^2 + 2as, you know the initial vertical velocity is zero because it was thrown horizontally.
 
I found the time from d=vo(t) + 1/2 at^2
And never mind about the horizontal, because i found that with dx=vx(t)
The part that's still tricking me up is the vertival...I've never seen v^2 + u^2 + 2as before so idk how else i would find it
 
Alternatively the vertical speed is v = u + a t, or simply v = gt if it is just dropped, this is obvious from the definition of accelaration.
the v^2 = u^2 + 2 a s, is from substiting the t from "s = ut + 1/2at^2" in "v = u + at"
 
ohhhhh i think I am getting that now...but then how would you find the initial velocity? it sounds like the easiest part but i still don't know how to fund it.
 
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