Projectile Motion - Niagra Falls

AI Thread Summary
The problem involves calculating the vertical distance a water molecule falls from Niagara Falls when it has a horizontal speed of 2.7 m/s and its velocity vector points downward at a 75° angle. Using the relationship between vertical and horizontal speeds, the vertical speed (vy) is determined to be approximately 10.08 m/s. The time of fall (t) is calculated as about 1.03 seconds. The vertical distance (y) fallen during this time is found to be approximately 5.2 meters. This analysis demonstrates the application of projectile motion principles in real-world scenarios.
crono_
Messages
44
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



Suppose the water at the top of Niagara Falls has a horizontal speed of 2.7 m/s just before it cascades over the edge of the falls. At what vertical distance below the edge does the velocity vector of the water point downward at a 75° angle below the horizontal?

x direction

a = 0 m/s

v0x = 2.7 m/s

vfx= 2.7 m/s

x = ?

y direction

ay = -9.80 m/s2

v0y = 0 m/s

vfy = ?

y = ?

Other Info

Angle = 75 degrees below horizontal

t = ?

Homework Equations



Newton's laws of motion...but I'm not exactly sure which ones as it appears there are two variables missing from each one.

The Attempt at a Solution



I'm studying for my final this Friday. This question plagued me at the beginning of the term, I never got it. The class moved on, and so did I. But I'm looking at it again and am determined to get it, but am still drawing a blank.

I'd like to find t as that would help significantly, but each equation that I've considered with it has another unknown variable as well.

Kind of flustered...
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Imagine a water molecule falling off the edge of the waterfall. What's its vertical speed at time t? What's its horizontal speed? How are the vertical & horizontal speeds related to the 75 degrees?
 
If you do it correctly, you WILL get t.
 
tan-1 = (vy / vx) = 75 degrees
 
Wait...

vy / vx = tan 75

vy = tan 75 (vx)

vy = 10.0765 m/s



vfy = voy + at

vfy - voy / a = t

t = 1.0282 s



y = 1/2 (vfy + voy) t

y = 1/2 (10.0765 m/s + 0 m/s) 1.0282 s

y = 5.18 m ----> 5.2 m with sig figs


Hrm...interesting....
 
I multiplied the values first without the error limit. Got 19.38. rounded it off to 2 significant figures since the given data has 2 significant figures. So = 19. For error I used the above formula. It comes out about 1.48. Now my question is. Should I write the answer as 19±1.5 (rounding 1.48 to 2 significant figures) OR should I write it as 19±1. So in short, should the error have same number of significant figures as the mean value or should it have the same number of decimal places as...
Thread 'A cylinder connected to a hanging mass'
Let's declare that for the cylinder, mass = M = 10 kg Radius = R = 4 m For the wall and the floor, Friction coeff = ##\mu## = 0.5 For the hanging mass, mass = m = 11 kg First, we divide the force according to their respective plane (x and y thing, correct me if I'm wrong) and according to which, cylinder or the hanging mass, they're working on. Force on the hanging mass $$mg - T = ma$$ Force(Cylinder) on y $$N_f + f_w - Mg = 0$$ Force(Cylinder) on x $$T + f_f - N_w = Ma$$ There's also...

Similar threads

Back
Top