What Is the Height of the Building If a Ball Lands 35 Meters Away?

  • Thread starter Thread starter wellojello
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Building
AI Thread Summary
To determine the height of the building from which a ball is thrown horizontally at 23.7 m/s and lands 35 meters away, the horizontal motion formula was used to calculate the time of flight, resulting in t = 1.5 seconds. Subsequently, the vertical motion formula was applied to find the height, yielding a calculated height of 11.025 meters. However, the response indicated that this answer was incorrect, prompting a review of the calculations for potential errors in values or formulas used. The discussion highlights the importance of verifying calculations in physics problems. The user acknowledges posting in the wrong thread, indicating a mix-up in the forum.
wellojello
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
greetings :)

so I'm pretty stumped on this one question from masteringphysics:

A ball thrown horizontally at 23.7 m/s from the roof of a building lands 35.0 m from the base of the building. How high is the building?

i first listed all of my given values
---------------------------
v_x0 = 23.7 m/s
a = a_y = -g = -9.8 m/s^2
x = 35 m
x_0 = y_0 = 0
v_y0 = 0
a_x = 0
t = ?
y = ?
---------------------------

used the horizontal motion formula to find t

x = x_0 + v_x0 t + 1/2a_x t^2
t = 35/23.7 = 1.5s

and then the vertical motion formula to find y with the time i found above

y = y_0 + v_y0 t - 1/2gt^2
y = -1/2 (9.8)(1.5^2)
y = 11.025m

---------------------------

they said that this answer is "not quite", but i went over my calculations and still got 11.025 m. did i plug in the wrong values or used the wrong formulas?

thanks!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
i just realized I've posted this onto the wrong thread. my apologies
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
TL;DR Summary: I came across this question from a Sri Lankan A-level textbook. Question - An ice cube with a length of 10 cm is immersed in water at 0 °C. An observer observes the ice cube from the water, and it seems to be 7.75 cm long. If the refractive index of water is 4/3, find the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. I could not understand how the apparent height of the ice cube in the water depends on the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. Does anyone have an...
Thread 'A bead-mass oscillatory system problem'
I can't figure out how to find the velocity of the particle at 37 degrees. Basically the bead moves with velocity towards right let's call it v1. The particle moves with some velocity v2. In frame of the bead, the particle is performing circular motion. So v of particle wrt bead would be perpendicular to the string. But how would I find the velocity of particle in ground frame? I tried using vectors to figure it out and the angle is coming out to be extremely long. One equation is by work...
Back
Top