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A ball is thrown vertically upwards with an initial velocity of 39.2 m/s - Leaving Cert Applied Maths - Question 1 - 2008

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A ball is thrown vertically upwards with an initial velocity of 39.2 m/s. Find (i) the time taken to reach the maximum height. (ii) the distance travelled in 5 seco... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:A ball is thrown vertically upwards with an initial velocity of 39.2 m/s - Leaving Cert Applied Maths - Question 1 - 2008

Step 1

Find (i) the time taken to reach the maximum height.

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Answer

To find the time taken to reach the maximum height, we can use the formula:

v=u+atv = u + at

At maximum height, the final velocity (v) is 0 m/s. The initial velocity (u) is 39.2 m/s, and the acceleration (a) due to gravity is -9.8 m/s².

Setting up the equation:

0=39.29.8t0 = 39.2 - 9.8t

Rearranging this gives us:

9.8t=39.29.8t = 39.2

Thus,

t=39.29.8=4 secondst = \frac{39.2}{9.8} = 4 \text{ seconds}

Step 2

Find (ii) the distance travelled in 5 seconds.

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Answer

To calculate the distance travelled in 5 seconds, we can use the formula:

s=ut+12at2s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2

Here, the initial velocity (u) is 39.2 m/s, the time (t) is 5 seconds, and the acceleration (a) is -9.8 m/s².

Now substituting these values:

s=39.2(5)+12(9.8)(5)2s = 39.2(5) + \frac{1}{2}(-9.8)(5)^2

Calculating the terms:

s=19612(9.8)(25)s = 196 - \frac{1}{2}(9.8)(25)

s=196122.5s = 196 - 122.5

Therefore,

s=73.5 ms = 73.5 \text{ m}

Step 3

Find (i) the acceleration of P and the acceleration of Q.

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Answer

To find the acceleration of P and Q, we start with the speeds:

  • The speed of Q after 2 minutes is 65.5 m/s.
  • Initially, the speed of Q was 5.5 m/s.

Using the formula:

v=u+atv = u + at

We set up for Q:

65.5=5.5+aQ(120)65.5 = 5.5 + a_Q \cdot (120)

Rearranging gives:

aQ=(65.55.5)120=60120=0.5 m/s2a_Q = \frac{(65.5 - 5.5)}{120} = \frac{60}{120} = 0.5 \text{ m/s}^2

For particle P, knowing that it starts at 23 m/s, we can set:

sP=uPt+12aPt2s_P = u_P t + \frac{1}{2} a_P t^2

The distance formula gives:

4260=23(120)+12aP(120)24260 = 23(120) + \frac{1}{2} a_P (120)^2

Solving this will give us:

aP=426027607200=15007200=0.208 m/s2a_P = \frac{4260 - 2760}{7200} = \frac{1500}{7200} = 0.208 \text{ m/s}^2

Step 4

Find (ii) the speed of P when Q overtakes it.

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Answer

To find the speed of P when Q overtakes it, we note that at the moment they have equal speed:

Let the speed of P when Q overtakes be v_P:

Given:

  • Initial speed of P = 23 m/s
  • Q's acceleration = 0.5 m/s²,
  • Time taken = 120 seconds,

Using the formula:

vP=uP+atv_P = u_P + at

Substituting values:

vP=23+(0.5)(120)=23+60=83 m/sv_P = 23 + (0.5)(120) = 23 + 60 = 83 \text{ m/s}

Step 5

Find (iii) the distance P is ahead of Q when they are moving with equal speeds.

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Answer

The distance P is ahead of Q can be calculated using their respective distances at equal speeds:

For Q:

sQ=uQt+12aQt2=5.5(120)+12(0.5)(120)2s_Q = u_Q t + \frac{1}{2} a_Q t^2 = 5.5(120) + \frac{1}{2}(0.5)(120)^2

Calculating this:

sQ=660+12(0.5)(14400)=660+3600=4260 ms_Q = 660 + \frac{1}{2}(0.5)(14400) = 660 + 3600 = 4260 \text{ m}

For P:

sP=23(120)+12aPt2s_P = 23(120) + \frac{1}{2} a_P t^2

Calculate P's distance:

sP=2760+(0.125)(14400)=2760+900=3660 ms_P = 2760 + (0.125)(14400) = 2760 + 900 = 3660\text{ m}

Thus, the distance P is ahead:

distance=sQsP=42603660=600 mdistance = s_Q - s_P = 4260 - 3660 = 600 \text{ m}

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