Rock Climbing Homework: Find Speed at 2nd Protection

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The discussion revolves around calculating the speed of a climber at the second piece of protection after falling. The climber falls 5 meters before the first piece of protection, which reduces her velocity by half, followed by an additional 6 meters until the second piece of protection. The equations used include kinematic formulas to determine the final velocity based on the initial velocity and acceleration due to gravity. Participants express confusion regarding the application of the equations and the relationship between initial and final velocities. The conversation highlights the complexities of applying physics concepts to climbing scenarios.
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Homework Statement



Imagine a climber 5.00 m directly abour her uppermost piece of protection, with no slack (exercise lenght) in rope, and the next piece of protection is 6.00 m directly below the uppermost piece of protection. She falls with an acceleration of 9.80 m/s^2 downward. The first piece of protection cuts her velocity in half, but then it fails and she falls farther. What is her speed just when the rope pulls on the second piece of protection?

Homework Equations



deltaX=5m, 6m
a=9.8m/s^2
Vfinal=?

The Attempt at a Solution



Vf^2=Vini^2=2(-9.8)(5)
Vf^2=9.8
9.8/2=4.9

vf^2=Vi^2+2(-9.8)(6)

vf^2=4.9^2+2(-9.8)(6)
Vf=9.64
 
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Vf^2=Vini^2=2(-9.8)(5)
Vf^2=9.8
9.8/2=4.9

It's kind of confusing here.
why Vf^2=Vini^2??
and how you got 9.8 there in the second line?
 
well the 9.8 is the acceleration and Velocity initial is from the Velocity final from the 1st equation. I don't know where to go from there.
 
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