Probably an easy kinematics question

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A ball is fired upwards from a height of 32 meters at an initial velocity of 17 m/s, and it takes 20 seconds to hit the ground. To find the planet's gravitational acceleration (g), users discuss using kinematic equations, emphasizing that displacement should be considered from the launch point to the ground. The correct approach involves recognizing that the total displacement is -32 meters, and rearranging the kinematic equation to solve for g. After some calculations, the correct value of g is confirmed to be approximately -1.86 m/s², highlighting the importance of sign conventions in displacement. The discussion concludes with an acknowledgment of the complexity of the problem and an offer for assistance in other subjects.
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Homework Statement


If a ball is fired upwards on an unknown planet at 17 m/s from a gun being held 32m above the ground, and it takes 20 seconds before the ball hits the ground, what is the magnitude of the planets 'g' value (acceleration)?

Homework Equations



kinematic eq'ns

The Attempt at a Solution



i really don't understand this problem, can someone give me a hint?? how would i find the final position for when the ball is fired up?
 
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what can you say about the velocity of the ball when it reaches its maximum height?
 
the velocity at the maximum height would be 0m/s
 
i don't know how to find x without being given an acceleration or time.. maybe I'm missing an eq'n?
 
well, what equations do you have, and what have you tried? If you post your attempts, however small they may be, then someone will be able to point you in the correct direction.

Remember, you only need to find the acceleration due to gravity, not the vertical height
 
Consider one dimension only,

the acceleration = -g

velocity=-gt+initial velocity

displacement=0.5*gt2-t*initial velocity

those are the "kinematic eq'ns" you might be looking for. I don't think you really need to know velocity at the top, cristo was pulling your leg! provided you can rearrange and plug things in you;ll be fine.

What is the displacement you are looking for?
 
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billiards said:
Consider one dimension only,

I don't think you really need to know velocity at the top, cristo was pulling your leg! provided you can rearrange and plug things in you;ll be fine.

I

Yea, I realized that.. its a lot simpler to just consider the complete motion!
 
arghhhhhh i still don't understand any of this :rolleyes: ... maybe that's why I'm a biology student haha :-p

anyways, I'm stuck on the idea of finding the maximum height ... and this would give me acceleration i don't know what the hell I am doing haha
 
I can't help you any more without actually doing it for you.

To simplify matters don't consider what happens in those 20 seconds before the ball hits the ground. Just use the last kinematic equation I gave you, the displacement is relative to where the ball was launched (taking a "positive upwards" convention, the ball hits the ground at -32m). You've got one unknown and that's g, rearrange and solve...
 
  • #10
maybe I am reading the question wrong.. but I am assuming the 20seconds is the time the ball leaves the gun until it reaches the ground? or is the 20 seconds from the maximum height until it reaches the ground? anyway the equation you gave has 2 unknowns so therefore i don't see how i can solve it.. yes i suck at math
 
  • #11
your assumption about the 20 seconds being the time from when the ball leaves the gun is correct!

you know the displacement.
you know the time.
you know the initial velocity.

all you have to do is find g.
 
  • #12
how do i know displacement if i don't know the maximum height?
 
  • #13
You're shooting a ball from a vertical height of 32m directly up in the air. If you consider the whole motion of the ball, to when the ball hits the ground, what do you think the total displacement is? Billiards gives you a hint (well, the answer!)

billiards said:
(taking a "positive upwards" convention, the ball hits the ground at -32m). You've got one unknown and that's g, rearrange and solve...

To clarify this: consider the point from which the ball is released to be the origin. Let h represent the maximum height, measured from this origin. Then, the total displacement is h+ (-h) -32 (since the ball is released from 32m below the origin)
 
  • #14
You can solve this problem with a single kinematics equation. This equation has the following: initial height, initial velocity, and time. You are given all of those variables. This equation also includes (g) or gravity. What is this equation? :smile:
 
  • #15
well i used the equation x=x(initial)+v(initial)t+0.5at^2 and i got the answer of 1.24m/s^2 is that right?
 
  • #16
antiflux said:
well i used the equation x=x(initial)+v(initial)t+0.5at^2 and i got the answer of 1.24m/s^2 is that right?


Yeah that is the correct equation however I think you should use the variable "y" instead of "x" because height is vertical just like the y-axis on a coordinate plane.

I didn't get that answer, I think you subsitute some numbers in the wrong place. Please write out the equations with all the numbers in the correct places for me. I'll see what you did wrong from there.

Can anyone confirm if his procedure is correct? I'm a physics student myself and this is my first year as a sophomore taking it. So I'm not that experienced as many other people on this forum.
 
  • #17
x=0.5g(t^2)-t(v1)
-32=0.5g(20^2)-20(17)
-0.5g(400)=32+(-20(17))
-0.5g(400)=-308
g(400)=616
g=616/400
g=1.54

sorry i think my last one was wrong this one might be too but i got 1.54 this time
 
  • #18
AznBoi said:
Yeah that is the correct equation however I think you should use the variable "y" instead of "x" because height is vertical just like the y-axis on a coordinate plane.

The problem is 1d, so x is fine as a choice for a variable

antiflux said:
well i used the equation x=x(initial)+v(initial)t+0.5at^2 and i got the answer of 1.24m/s^2 is that right?

What does x correspond to in this equation. If it corresponds to x(final) then yes, the equation is correct, supposing that x(final) = 0, and x(initial) =32. (or x(final)=-32, x(initial)=0)
 
  • #19
antiflux said:
x=0.5g(t^2)-t(v1)
-32=0.5g(20^2)-20(17)
-0.5g(400)=32+(-20(17))
-0.5g(400)=-308
g(400)=616
g=616/400
g=1.54

sorry i think my last one was wrong this one might be too but i got 1.54 this time

a minus sign has crept in on the first line in front of (v1)t. change this to a plus, and the answer will be correct
 
  • #20
i assumed xinitial was 0m and xfinal was -32m... i just am having trouble visualizing how this is calculated without knowing how high the object actually reachesso g=-1.86 ?
 
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  • #21
I think something is wrong with your positive, negative signs.
 
  • #22
yes I got -1.86 . I think that is correct. Can anyone else verify?
 
  • #23
antiflux said:
i assumed xinitial was 0m and xfinal was -32m... i just am having trouble visualizing how this is calculated without knowing how high the object actually reaches


so g=-1.86 ?

Your answer is correct.

The ball travels up from the gun to the maximum height, then falls from the maximum height, down to where the gun is, and then a further 32m down to the ground. The point is that displacement is a vector, and the distance from the gun to the max height on the way up is positive, and the distance from the max height to the gun on the way down is negative. These two parts cancel each other out, and so we only need to concern ourselves with the vertical distance between the ground and the gun
 
  • #24
ok thanks, if anyone needs help with anything related to biology let me know :)
 
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