Projectile Problem: Marble falls from Desk

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aatari
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Hey Guys, I have attempted the question below and need someone to check my work, please.

Thanks!

1. Homework Statement

A marble rolls off a desk that is 0.86 m above the floor with a horizontal speed of 1.2 m/s.

a) What is the marble's horizontal velocity when it is half way to the floor?
b) What is the marble's vertical velocity at that point?
c) Describe the value of the vertical component of velocity as the marble falls to the floor.​

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


20170224_173634[545].jpg
 
on Phys.org
PeroK said:
For c), I don't think that ##0## is the answer they are looking for!
Will it be 2.9008 m/s?
 
It is not correct to write ##\vec g = - 9.8 m/s^2## , because a vector is never equal to a number.

After the ball leaves the table, the vertical component of its speed increases from ##9.8 m/s## to every second until it collides with the ground.
 
Last edited:
PeroK said:
No, you just do what you did to find its velocity half way to the floor.

You can safely ignore post #5.
I get it, thank you.
It will be 4.1 m/s.
 
aatari said:
I get it, thank you.
It will be 4.1 m/s.
In letter c he does not ask for speed by hitting the ground. He asks what happens to the speed over the fall.
 
Caio Graco said:
In letter c he does not ask for speed by hitting the ground. He asks what happens to the speed over the fall.
For this, see post # 5 "ignored".
 
PeroK said:
It looks like they weren't asking for the speed as it hits the floor, but a "description of the value" during the fall.
Exactly
 
PeroK said:
The thing to ignore was about the vector. The OP's diagram is good and clear in its vector representation, in my opinion.
The problem is that he wrote ##\vec g= - 9.8 m/s^2##
The correct is ##\vec g= -9.8 \vec j m/s^2## (vector equation) or else I could write ##g=-9.8 m/s^2## (scalar equation)
 
Caio Graco said:
The problem is that he wrote ##\vec g= - 9.8 m/s^2##
The correct is ##\vec g= -9.8 \vec j m/s^2## (vector equation) or else I could write ##g=-9.8 m/s^2## (scalar equation)

The OP's diagram is clear and that's just pointless pedantry.
 
Caio Graco said:
g=−9.8m/s2
When writing this it is being said that a vector is equal to a number. A vector can only be a vector and a number can only equal a number.
 
PeroK said:
The OP's diagram is clear and that's just pointless pedantry.
Ok.
 
Caio Graco said:
When writing this it is being said that a vector is equal to a number. A vector can only be a vector and a number can only equal a number.
Yes, you've made your point, but it really is a bit excessive to complain about that in an explanatory note in a diagram.
 
haruspex said:
Yes, you've made your point, but it really is a bit excessive to complain about that in an explanatory note in a diagram.
I agree. It's just a matter of formality.