Need help with trajectory question please

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The discussion revolves around calculating the horizontal distance from a cannon to a net for a human cannonball act. The cannon launches the projectile at a speed of 18.0 m/s and an angle of 35.0° above the horizontal, with the net positioned 5.0 m below the launch point. Initial calculations led to an incorrect distance of 6.0 m, while the correct distance is 37.1 m. Key errors included miscalculating the final vertical velocity and not properly accounting for directional signs in the equations. The conversation highlights the importance of careful application of physics formulas and the correct interpretation of velocity directions.
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Homework Statement



You have been employed by the local circus to plan their human cannonball performace. For this act, a spring-loaded cannon will shoot a human projectile, the Great Flyinski, across the big top to a ew below. The net is located 5.0 m lower than the muzzle of the cannon from which the Great Flyinski is launched. The cannon wil shoot the Great Flyinski at an angle of 35.0° above the horizontal and at a speed of 18.0 m/s. The ringmaster has asked that you decide how far from the cannon to place the net so that hte Great Flyinski will land in the net and not be splattered on the floor, which would greatly distrub the audience. What do you tell the ringmaster? So basically the question is asking to find the final distance in the x direction.

Homework Equations



vf = vi + at

xf-xi = vit + 1/2at^2

vf^2 = vi^2 + 2a(xf - xi)

xf - xi = 1/2(vf + vi)t

The Attempt at a Solution



We tried finding the final velocity on the y, then use that to find the time, then use the time to find the x (the final distance). But the problem is when using:

vf^2 = vi^2 + 2a(xf - xi)

I got...

vf^2 = (10.3 m/s)^2 + 2(-9.8 m/s^2)(0 m - 5 m)

10.3 is found by doing 18.0cos35° and 0 m and -5 m comes from the locations of the cannon and the net (net is 5 m below cannon).

so I got vf (for y) = 14.3 m/s

then I did time

yf - yi = 1/2(vf + vi)t

0 - 5 m = 1/2(14.3 m/s + 10.3 m/s)(t) = .41 s

tried pluggin time and final v for y in...

xf - xi = 1/2(vf + vi)t

xf - 0 = 1/2(14.7 m/s + 14.7 m/s)(t)

vf and vi for x are the same because acceleration along the x-axis doesn't change.

... = 6.0 m (which I got for how far away the net is from where the cannon shoots)

The correct answer is actually 37.1 m, can someone explain why what we did would not work?
 
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Be careful that you don't lose directional information (the sign) when you use formulae with squares. There may be one or more velocities that you've determined as going in the positive direction that should have been negative...
 
One thing I noticed, look again at 18 cos 35°. The adjacent side is horizontal, not vertical.
 
hey guys, thanks. the cos thing was a misprint (I did it correctly on paper), although good catch!

Vertigo, you are correct! I went over it again and noticed that final velocity on 'y' should be negative, but I came up with a positive number when I unsquared 204.09. So that is pretty tricky, but I figure as long as I remember that final y velocity is always negative (if projection is going DOWN), then that shouldn't be too bad.

Thanks a lot you guys were a big help, this %*&@ was bugging me for a while, lol.
 
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