MedVision ad

how to slove this question (1 Viewer)

Fply

New Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2003
Messages
28
During a visit to the Moon an astronaut throuws a rock vertically and it reaches a height of 20 m Acceleration due to gravity on moon is 1.6 what is the speed at which it was thrown on the moon?
 

failingTheHsc

Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2003
Messages
37
y acceleration = -1.6
y speed = -1.6t + V, V = inital velocity
y displacement = -1.6/2 t^2 + Vt

max heigh occurs when y speed = 0
t = v/1.6

sub back in to displacement
20 = -1.6/2 * V^2/(1.6)^2 + V^2/16
then solve for V
V = root(40 * 1.6)

i doubt they will ask this, it is too 'matemetically complicated'
 
N

ND

Guest
Originally posted by failingTheHsc
y acceleration = -1.6
y speed = -1.6t + V, V = inital velocity
y displacement = -1.6/2 t^2 + Vt

max heigh occurs when y speed = 0
t = v/1.6

sub back in to displacement
20 = -1.6/2 * V^2/(1.6)^2 + V^2/16
then solve for V
V = root(40 * 1.6)

i doubt they will ask this, it is too 'matemetically complicated'
Don't make it more complicated than it needs to be, look at my above post.
 

Fply

New Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2003
Messages
28
I have the same though as you guys
but if I tell you the answer is 25.3
can you explain why ?
 
Joined
Aug 24, 2003
Messages
135
i cant c how the hell they got 25.3....it cant be.....im getting 8 like everyone else..i agree with ND, answer is wrong.
 

Fply

New Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2003
Messages
28
this is a multipal choice question comes from James Rues High


the actual answer is 25.3

the other choices of answer include 62.6 640 and 3920
 

Takuya

Banned
Joined
Apr 24, 2003
Messages
225
Location
A blazing inferno of blood and despair...
Originally posted by failingTheHsc
y acceleration = -1.6
y speed = -1.6t + V, V = inital velocity
y displacement = -1.6/2 t^2 + Vt

max heigh occurs when y speed = 0
t = v/1.6

sub back in to displacement
20 = -1.6/2 * V^2/(1.6)^2 + V^2/16
then solve for V
V = root(40 * 1.6)

i doubt they will ask this, it is too 'matemetically complicated'
You're the one who's making it too complicated by using a whole lot of steps.
 

failingTheHsc

Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2003
Messages
37
Originally posted by Takuya
You're the one who's making it too complicated by using a whole lot of steps.
gee sorry i was just giving another way to do it which uses logic instead of just subbing into formulas

n u do 3 unit so u should appreciate my methods
 

Takuya

Banned
Joined
Apr 24, 2003
Messages
225
Location
A blazing inferno of blood and despair...
Originally posted by failingTheHsc
gee sorry i was just giving another way to do it which uses logic instead of just subbing into formulas

n u do 3 unit so u should appreciate my methods
Not really, because you're just subbing into formulas the same way as we're doing. You're just acknowledging that at the maximum height, y velocity is zero and using the formula

r=ut+0.5(at^2)

Note s = r = displacement. I think this syllabus actually refers to it as r, not s.

If you were to do it mathematically without Newtonian formulae then it would be a different story...
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top