What Speed Should the Second Ball Have to Meet the First at Its Peak?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the speed at which the second ball must be thrown to meet the first ball at its peak, the juggler must first calculate the time it takes for the first ball to reach its highest point, which is influenced by its initial speed of 14 m/s and the acceleration due to gravity (-10 m/s²). The first ball takes 1.4 seconds to reach its peak, so the second ball, thrown half a second later, must reach the same height in 0.9 seconds. Using the formula for distance and the known parameters, the speed of the second ball can be calculated. The discussion highlights the importance of correctly interpreting time intervals and initial velocities to solve the problem accurately.
gtg141h
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I'm having difficulty figuring out this problem.
Is there a formula I can use?
A juggler throws a ball straight up into the air with a speed of 14m/s. With what speed would she need to throw a second ball half a second later, starting from the same position as the first, in order to hit the first ball at the top of its trajectory?
 
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gtg141h said:
I'm having difficulty figuring out this problem.
Is there a formula I can use?
A juggler throws a ball straight up into the air with a speed of 14m/s. With what speed would she need to throw a second ball half a second later, starting from the same position as the first, in order to hit the first ball at the top of its trajectory?

Welcome to PF.

What equations do you think apply?

For instance what formulas do you know that might relate velocity to height? How long does it take the first ball to get there?

If you know how long you have and you wait another .5 seconds then how fast does the second ball need to be to get to that height at that same time?
 

Homework Statement


I'm having difficulty figuring out this problem.
Is there a formula I can use?
A juggler throws a ball straight up into the air with a speed of 14m/s. With what speed would she need to throw a second ball half a second later, starting from the same position as the first, in order to hit the first ball at the top of its trajectory?

I'm pretty sure that I am supposed to use acceleration as -10m/s^2, so I think I need to know how long it would take for the ball to go up and then land back down to find the time. I tried using this formula v(final) = v(initial) + acceleration(change of time), which is 0-14/-10=1.4s. Then I get stuck...I don't know how to get from that information to finding the velocity of the second.
 
gtg141h said:
I'm having difficulty figuring out this problem.
Is there a formula I can use?
A juggler throws a ball straight up into the air with a speed of 14m/s. With what speed would she need to throw a second ball half a second later, starting from the same position as the first, in order to hit the first ball at the top of its trajectory?

You should have been given the basic formula in class. You are given the initial belocity, final velocity and acceleration (a) (due to gravity) so you should be able to work out the time (t) for all this to happen. Then you will have t, a and v for the second ball, therefore...
 
So you can use v(final) = v(initial) + acceleration (time) to find how long it takes to reach the highest point (question: is it 0.7s or 1.4s?)

Then there is this other formula:
(travelled distance) = 1/2 * (acceleration) * (time)^2 + (inital velocity) * time + (initial distance)
which you could use for the second ball
 
Ok, so would that mean that the second ball would have the equation:
traveled distance = (1/2)(10)*(.7^2) + (14)(.7), which equals 12.25m. So then would I divide the distance traveled by 0.7 to get the speed? 12.25/0.7= 17.5m/s. Is this correct?
 
gtg141h said:
traveled distance = (1/2)(10)*(.7^2) + (14)(.7)

Where are you getting 0.7? The problem states "half a second later", not "half the time later".
 
microguy said:
Where are you getting 0.7? The problem states "half a second later", not "half the time later".

Sorry I forgot to ask also -- where are you getting 14? That was the initial velocity of ball 1. The initial velocity of ball 2 is unknown -- it's what you're supposed to be solving for (^:

The distance traveled is known--or can be determined by plugging ball 1 into

d = 1/2 (v_initial - v_final) * t
 
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