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A particle is projected with an initial velocity of $26 \, i + 40 \, j \, m \, s^{-1}$ from a point C on a horizontal plane - Leaving Cert Applied Maths - Question 3 - 2021

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A particle is projected with an initial velocity of $26 \, i + 40 \, j \, m \, s^{-1}$ from a point C on a horizontal plane. The particle lands at point D. The part... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:A particle is projected with an initial velocity of $26 \, i + 40 \, j \, m \, s^{-1}$ from a point C on a horizontal plane - Leaving Cert Applied Maths - Question 3 - 2021

Step 1

(i) the time of flight

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Answer

To calculate the time of flight, we first determine when the particle will be at the same vertical position (height) as its point of projection. The vertical motion can be described using the equation:

y=ut+12at2y = ut + \frac{1}{2} a t^2

where:

  • u=40ms1u = 40 \, m \, s^{-1} (vertical component of initial velocity)
  • a=9.81ms2a = -9.81 \, m \, s^{-2} (acceleration due to gravity)
  • y=60my = -60 \, m (final position 60 m above the horizontal)

This translates to:

60=40t5t2-60 = 40t - 5t^2

Rearranging gives:

5t240t60=05t^2 - 40t - 60 = 0

Using the quadratic formula, we find:

= \frac{40 \pm \sqrt{1600 + 1200}}{10} \ = \frac{40 \pm \sqrt{2800}}{10} \ = \frac{40 \pm 52.92}{10}$$ Calculating the positive root gives: t = 8 s.

Step 2

(ii) the horizontal range

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Answer

The horizontal range can be calculated by using the horizontal component of the velocity and the time of flight. The horizontal component is:

ux=26ms1u_x = 26 \, m \, s^{-1}.

The range RR is given by:

R=uxtR = u_x \cdot t

Thus, substituting the values:

R=26ms18s=208mR = 26 \, m \, s^{-1} \cdot 8 \, s = 208 \, m.

Step 3

(iii) the times when the particle is 60 m above the horizontal plane

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Answer

Using the vertical motion equation again, we can find the time at which the particle is 60 m above the horizontal. We solve:

60=40t5t2-60 = 40t - 5t^2

This simplifies to the same equation solved in part (i):

5t240t60=05t^2 - 40t - 60 = 0

As previously derived, we found:

t^2 - 8t + 12 = 0
This factors to:

(t6)(t2)=0(t - 6)(t - 2) = 0 Thus, t=2st = 2 \, s and t=6st = 6 \, s.

Step 4

(iv) the distance between points P and Q

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Answer

The distance between points P and Q is simply the horizontal distance traveled during the times calculated. As both points are at the same vertical height and the horizontal motion is uniform, we can use:

PQ=ux(t2t1)=26ms1(62)s=26ms14s=104m|PQ| = u_x \cdot (t_2 - t_1) = 26 \, m \, s^{-1} \cdot (6 - 2) \, s = 26 \, m \, s^{-1} \cdot 4 \, s = 104 \, m.

Step 5

(i) the time it takes for the particle to land

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Answer

For the second part, we analyze the vertical motion from the cliff height. The vertical displacement yy is given by:

y=ut+12at2y = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2

Here:

  • y=98my = -98 \, m (the drop distance from the height of the cliff)
  • u=35sin(α)ms1u = 35 \sin(\alpha) \, m \, s^{-1}
  • a=9.81ms2a = -9.81 \, m \, s^{-2}.

So the equation becomes:

98=35sin(α)t12(9.81)t2-98 = 35 \sin(\alpha) t - \frac{1}{2}(9.81)t^2.

With sin(α)=31335sin(α)27.14\sin(\alpha) = \frac{3}{\sqrt{13}} \Rightarrow 35\sin(\alpha) \approx 27.14, solving the quadratic equation gives:

t=7st = 7 \, s.

Step 6

(ii) the value of x

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Answer

Finally, to find the horizontal distance xx when the particle lands:

x=uxtx = u_x \cdot t

With ux=35cos(α)u_x = 35 \cos(\alpha), where cos(α)=213\cos(\alpha) = \frac{2}{\sqrt{13}}:

= 35 \cdot \left(\frac{2}{\sqrt{13}}\right) \cdot 7 \ = 196 \, m.$

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