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GIG Read the passage and mark your answers on your whiteboard. NOT ON THE PAPER. Questions 29-30.

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Presentation on theme: "GIG Read the passage and mark your answers on your whiteboard. NOT ON THE PAPER. Questions 29-30."— Presentation transcript:

1 GIG Read the passage and mark your answers on your whiteboard. NOT ON THE PAPER. Questions

2 Projectile Motion at an Angle

3 Projectile Review Position and velocity formulae for projectiles
xf = xi + vixt yf = yi +viyt - .5gt2 vxf = vxi (In other words, horizontal velocity does not change) vyf = vyi - gt

4 Try this on your whiteboard
A ball rolls off a table with a horizontal velocity of 2.47m/s and hits the ground .350s later. How fast was it moving horizontally when it hit the ground? Vertically?

5 Try this on your whiteboard
A ball rolls off a table with a horizontal velocity of 2.47m/s and hits the ground .350s later. How fast was it moving horizontally when it hit the ground? Vertically? Vfx = vix = 2.47m/s Vfy = 0m/s m/s2(.350s) = -3.43m/s

6 Angled Projectiles So far, we have only considered projectiles launched horizontally off a ledge. These projectiles have an initial vertical velocity of zero. What if the projectile is launched with an initial vertical velocity? This is where trigonometry comes back into play.

7 Angled Projectiles Problems with an angled projectile typically tell you an object was launched with an initial velocity of ___ m/s and at an angle of ___ degrees. You will then calculate distance, time, or final velocity.

8 Position-Time Formulae with Angle θ
x-component xf = xi + (vi cosθ)t y-component yf = yi + (vi sinθ)t - .5gt2

9 Throwing a Ball An athlete throws a ball at 4.99 m/s at an angle 35.0° above the horizontal. After 1.00s it hits the ground. How high was the ball above the ground when the athlete released it? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2.

10 Throwing a Ball An athlete throws a ball at 4.99 m/s at an angle 35.0° above the horizontal. After 1.00s it hits the ground. How high was the ball above the ground when the athlete released it? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2. yf = yi + (vi sinθ)t - .5gt2 0m = yi + (4.99m/s)(sin35.0°)(1.00s) - .5(9.81m/s2)(1.00s)2 0m = yi m m yi = 2.04m

11 Try this on your whiteboard
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. After 2.24s it lands. Assuming the height of the launch and landing spots is equal and gravity = 9.81m/s2, how far did the ball travel?

12 Try this on your whiteboard
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. After 2.24s it lands. Assuming the height of the launch and landing spots is equal, how far did the ball travel? xf = xi + (vi cosθ)t xf = 0m + (13.5m/s)(cos54.0°)(2.24s) = 17.8m

13 Try this on your whiteboard - Part II
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. How high above the ground was the ball at 1.76s? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2.

14 Try this on your whiteboard - Part II
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. How high above the ground was the ball at 1.76s? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2. yf = yi + (vi sinθ)t - .5gt2 yf = 0m + (13.5m/s)(sin54.0°)(1.76s) - .5(9.81m/s2)(1.76s)2 yf = 0m m m = 4.03m

15 Velocity-Time Formulae with Angle θ
x-component vxf = vicosθ y-component Vyf = visinθ - gt

16 Jumping Frog A frog leaps into the air at 2.5 m/s at an angle 52° above the horizontal. What is his vertical speed after 0.25s? What is the horizontal component of his speed?

17 Jumping Frog A frog leaps into the air at 2.5 m/s at an angle 52° above the horizontal. What is his vertical speed after 0.25s? What is the horizontal component of his speed? xvf = vicosθ = 2.5m/s(cos52°) = 1.5m/s Note that time is irrelevant to his horizontal velocity. The horizontal velocity of a projectile is constant.

18 Jumping Frog A frog leaps into the air at 2.5 m/s at an angle 52° above the horizontal. What is his vertical speed after 0.25s?

19 Jumping Frog A frog leaps into the air at 2.5 m/s at an angle 52° above the horizontal. What is his vertical speed after 0.25s? yvf = visinθ - gt = 2.5m/s(sin52°) m/s2(.25s) yvf = -0.48m/s Note that the negative sign means the frog is heading back down at this time.

20 Try this on your whiteboard - Part III
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. What is its speed when time = 1.76s and vertical position = 4.03m? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2.

21 Try this on your whiteboard - Part III
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. What is its speed when time = 1.76s and vertical position = 4.03m? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2. You will need to solve the vertical and horizontal components of speed and then use the pythagorean theorem. The horizontal is not hard: vxf = vicosθ vxf = 13.5m/s(cos54.0°) = m/s

22 Try this on your whiteboard - Part III
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. What is its speed when time = 1.76s and vertical position = 4.03m? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2. Vertical component: Vyf = visinθ - gt = 13.5m/s(sin54.0°) m/s2(1.76s) Vyf = m/s m/s = m/s

23 Try this on your whiteboard - Part III
A golf ball is launched at 13.5 m/s at an angle 54.0° above the horizontal. What is its speed when time = 1.76s and vertical position = 4.03m? Assume gravity = 9.81m/s2. Use pythagorean theorem to put the two components together. (7.9351m/s)2 + ( m/s)2 = m2/s2 √ = 10.2m/s

24 Homework 2-D Motion Problems, due Friday.

25 Closure Answer on your whiteboard:
An archer shoots an arrow at a target 15.0 m away. Although aimed at the center of the target, the arrow lands .52m below it. How long was the arrow in flight?


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