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Other Applications of Velocity, Acceleration 3.2.

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Presentation on theme: "Other Applications of Velocity, Acceleration 3.2."— Presentation transcript:

1 Other Applications of Velocity, Acceleration 3.2

2 Free Falling Objects Gravity -32 for feet -9.8 for meters Time Initial Velocity Initial Position

3 A dynamite blast blows a heavy rock straight up with a launch velocity of 160 ft/sec. How high does the rock go? First we need s(t) Highest point is the maximum. This occurs when v = 0 What are the velocity and speed of the rock when it is 256 ft. above the ground on the way up? On the way down? We want velocity when s(t)=256 Speed is the absolute value of velocity, so the speed is 96 ft/sec

4 What is the acceleration at any time t during its flight? The acceleration is always -32 When does the rock hit the ground again? Rock hits when s(t)=0

5 Free Fall A heavy ball bearing is released from rest at time t = 0 seconds How many meters does the ball fall in the first 2 seconds? Initial velocity is 0 since we are starting from rest. Initial height is 0 since we are tracking the distance the object falls What is the velocity, speed and acceleration at this time? Speed = 19.6

6 Other Applications The number of gallons of water in a tank t minutes after the tank has started to drain is: How fast is the water running out at the end of 10 minutes? We want Q’(t) when t = 10 What is the average rate at which the water flows out during the first 10 minutes? Average rate of change is slope

7 Economics Application In manufacturing, cost of producing widgets is c(x) where x is the number of units produced. Marginal Cost: rate of change of cost wrt level of production

8 Economics Application Suppose that is costs: dollars to produce x radiators when 8 to 30 radiators are produced and that gives the dollar revenue from selling x radiators. About how much extra will it cost to produce one more radiator a day, given you produce 10 now and what is your estimated increase in revenue for selling 11 radiators a day? The cost of producing 1 more radiator is the marginal cost at x = 10 Marginal Cost Marginal revenue at x = 10 will give us the estimated increase in revenue!


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