Please help with Motion Problem, looks easy but is confusing (to me)

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SUMMARY

The forum discussion centers on a physics problem involving motion, specifically the height of a cliff from which a boulder drops. The problem states that a hiker observes the boulder taking 1.5 seconds to fall the last third of the distance to the ground. Various participants provide their calculations, with one user, Ambitwistor, arriving at an answer of approximately 327.7 meters, while another user, LTK Luong tu Khanh, calculates around 356 meters. The discrepancy in answers highlights the complexity of applying motion formulas accurately in this context.

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Hi,
I've spent a long time and wasted lots of paper on this question. It might be very easy to do but I have tried/used every one of the motion formulas and don't seem to get a right answer. This is one of those challenge question that our teacher has given us. He hasn't worked out the answer himself yet but one of the student who was able to get it says the answer is about 172.5m

Please could help me out with this Motion problem. Appreciate all the help. thnx

A hiker sees a boulder drop from the top of a cliff and notices that it takes 1.5seconds for the boulder to fall the last 1/3 of the way to the ground. What is the height of the cliff (in meters)?

here is a rough pic I drew:
http://www.clubbersnation.com/math/physics_problem.jpg
 
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thnks Ambitwistor for the explanation :)
I have never tried any problems like this before. I shall work it out now. :smile:
 
My answer is about 356m. There's no difference between my solution and Ambitwistor's .


LTK
 
Luong tu Khanhwrote
My answer is about 356m. There's no difference between my solution and Ambitwistor's .

Looks like a difference of 29 meters to me! I get Ambitwistor's answer (well, actually I get 327.7 m which I would round to 328).
 

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