How Do You Calculate Time of Flight and Range for a Rocket Launched at an Angle?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the time of flight and range for a rocket launched at a 36.87º angle with a specified acceleration. Initial calculations indicated a total time of flight of 101 seconds and a horizontal range of 43,680 meters, but these results were later corrected to 125 seconds and 41.4 kilometers. Participants noted that the problem's ambiguity regarding gravity during the rocket's first 20 seconds led to confusion, as the rocket's path is primarily linear due to constant acceleration. The conversation also highlighted the importance of interpreting the rocket's trajectory correctly, distinguishing between straight-line motion and the effects of gravity after fuel depletion. Ultimately, the correct approach involved adjusting the calculations to account for the rocket's angle and acceleration dynamics.
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Homework Statement


A rocket is launched at an angle of 36.87º (sin=0.6 cos=0.8) with an acceleration of 30m/s² for 20s (fuel runs out). Find a) total time of flight b) horizontal range.

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


for the first 20 seconds:
v= 30 * 20 = 600m/s d=30 * 20² * 0.5 = 6000m
so vertical distance is= 6000 * 0.6 = 3600m
and horizontal distance is= 6000 * 0.8 = 4800m

fuel runs out
vertical speed is v= 600 * 0.6 = 360m/s
0 = 360 - 10*t .: t=36s (time to reach max height)
max height is= 3600 + 360*36 - 10*36²*0.5 = 10,080m

after reaching max height
10080 = 10 * t² * 0.5 .: t=45s (time to land)
t=36+45=81s (amount of time gravity is doing it's job to make it fall)
horizontal speed is v= 600*0.8 = 480m/s
horizontal distance = 480 * 81 = 38880m

total horizontal distance = 4800 + 38880 = 43680m
total time of flight = 20 + 81 = 101sWell, it's wrong. The answer should be 41,4km and 125s.
Help me please, thanks in advance.
 
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125 seconds seems to match with 36.87 degrees off of vertical rather than horizontal.
Try the calculations using 0 degrees as vertical.
 
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HueHue said:
for the first 20 seconds:
v= 30 * 20 = 600m/s d=30 * 20² * 0.5 = 6000m
so vertical distance is= 6000 * 0.6 = 3600m
and horizontal distance is= 6000 * 0.8 = 4800m
This is saying that its path for the first 20 secs will be a straight line??
 
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Since acceleration is given and not thrust, it sounds like this is a straight line simplified problem.
 
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Thanks everyone, I figured out what's wrong. I swaped the 0.6's with the 0.8's
Now I'm getting the right results!
Thanks again, see ya
 
The problem statement is a bit ambiguous in terms of gravity for the first 20 seconds, but as you get the correct result you chose the intended interpretation apparently.

NascentOxygen said:
This is saying that its path for the first 20 secs will be a straight line??
Every rocket accelerating from rest will move in a straight line if the direction and magnitude of thrust does not change - constant acceleration from rest gives a straight line.
 
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mfb said:
Every rocket accelerating from rest will move in a straight line if the direction and magnitude of thrust does not change
Indeed, and for fireworks rockets that direction is fixed as "straight out the back" and they invariably follow an arc across the sky. Practically every rocket we observe launched at a low angle does not follow a straight line.

The question could be improved, perhaps by changing to 'a guided missile', so the reader is made aware it is steerable.
 
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NascentOxygen said:
Practically every rocket we observe launched at a low angle does not follow a straight line.
Usually because thrust or the orientation of the rocket change (e.g. firework rockets have a short acceleration phase and then fly under the influence of gravity), but here the direction and magnitude is fixed, so the rocket follows a straight line until it runs out of fuel.
 
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