Projectile motion and acceleration HELP

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the minimum acceleration needed for a lemming to clear a 4-meter gap while jumping horizontally from a 20-meter cliff. Participants clarify that the lemming's initial velocity is purely horizontal, meaning its vertical motion is governed by free fall with an acceleration of -10 m/s². The time to fall is calculated to be 2 seconds, leading to a required horizontal velocity of 2 m/s to clear the gap. The acceleration needed to achieve this horizontal velocity from rest over a distance of 2 meters is determined to be 1 m/s². The conversation emphasizes the importance of breaking down the motion into X and Y components and understanding the role of gravity in the calculations.
nrw
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Homework Statement



A lemming accelerates uniformly starting from rest 2 meters before jumping horizontally from the top of a 20 m high cliff. What is the minimum acceleration required so that the lemming can clear the rocks stretching out 4 m from the base of the cliff?

Homework Equations


I know that we have both an X and Y component we need to calculate, but what is confusing to me is that - how does the 2 meters at the beginning play into the horizontal velocity? And since the lemming is jumping horizontally - what does that mean? Does that mean something other than free fall? Is the initial velocity of the jump the final velocity of the horizontal velocity?

The Attempt at a Solution


I have tried this several ways, but have no idea if I'm doing it right. For the X component, I have the initial velocity is 0, the final velocity is unknown, the displacement is 2 m (??) and acceleration is 0 (because can acceleration exist in a horizontal dimension?) and the t is unknown. For the y component, I have the initial velocity as 0, but I don't know if this is correct? The acceleration is -10 m/s2, the Y displacement is -40. So, do I use the pythagorean theorem to find the final velocity of Y? I'm totally confused about where to start. Thanks!
 
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Welcome to PF!

Hi nrw! Welcome to PF! :smile:

Let's restate the problem more clearly …

i] a projectile leaves the top of a 20m cliff, with initial velocity purely horizontal, and lands 4m from the base: what is its initial speed, v0?

ii] what acceleration must it have had to get from rest to v0 after 2m?
 
Thanks! So when the initial velocity is purely horizontal, that means that we are assuming the initial speed of the fall is 0 and thus, the y-component is calculated using simple free fall acceleration?
I first calculated the time it would take the lemming to land if it were free falling... using y=Vi (t) - 1/2 a t2. This gives me 2 seconds. Then, if the lemming has only 2 seconds to clear 4 m, it must have a velocity of 2 m/s2 (using x=vt). Then, to calculate the acceleration, I use v2 = vi2 + 2aX and get the acceleration of 1 m/s.
Does that sound right?
I guess I'm confused about when to use a = -9.8 (all falls?) and when to break a equation up into both X and Y components.
Thanks!
 
nrw said:
Thanks! So when the initial velocity is purely horizontal, that means that we are assuming the initial speed of the fall is 0 and thus, the y-component is calculated using simple free fall acceleration?

Yup! :biggrin:
I first calculated the time it would take the lemming to land if it were free falling... using y=Vi (t) - 1/2 a t2. This gives me 2 seconds. Then, if the lemming has only 2 seconds to clear 4 m, it must have a velocity of 2 m/s2 (using x=vt). Then, to calculate the acceleration, I use v2 = vi2 + 2aX and get the acceleration of 1 m/s.
Does that sound right?

Using g = 10, yes. :smile:
I guess I'm confused about when to use a = -9.8 (all falls?) and when to break a equation up into both X and Y components.

Don't ask yourself "what is the acceleration?" …

ask yourself "what is the force?"

If it's gravity, then it's 9.8 (or 10 :wink:) …

if it's an applied force, then it isn't 9.8 !

(of course, sometimes it's both … eg a rocket)

But you must always break it up into X and Y components (or surface and normal, or whatever) …

F = ma is a vector equation, and you must treat it as such (unless of course the motion is obviously one-dimensional, in which case one of the component equations will be 0 = 0 :wink:)
 
Wow! Thank you so much for your help! Thinking of acceleration as force really helps - I appreciate your time and the way you ex;lain things!
 
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