On level ground a shell is fired with an initial velocity of40m/sat60°above the horizontal and feels no appreciable air resistance. (a) Find the horizontal and vertical components of the shell’s initial velocity. (b) How long does it take the shell to reach its highest point? (c) Find its maximum height above the ground. (d) How far from its firing point does the shell land? (e) At its highest point, find the horizontal and vertical components of its acceleration and velocity

Short Answer

Expert verified

a) The vertical and horizontal of the velocity of the shell is 34.6 m/s and 20 m/s respectively.

b) The time taken by the shell to reach highest point is 3.53 s .

c) The maximum height of the shell above the ground is 61 m .

d) The distance of the shell landed from its firing point is 141 m .

e) The final horizontal and vertical component of acceleration are zero and -9.8m/s2, and the final vertical and horizontal component of velocity are zero and 20 m/s respectively.

Step by step solution

01

Identification of given data

The given data can be listed below,

  • The initial velocity of the shell is,v0=40m/s.
  • The horizontal angle is 60°.
02

Concept/Significance of the maximum height.

A maximum vertical component of the initial velocity results in the greatest height. The projectile is propelled vertically causes the phenomena.

03

(a) Determination of the horizontal and vertical components of the shell’s initial velocity

The vertical component of velocity is given by,

v0y=v0sin60°

Here, v0is the initial velocity of shell.

Substitute value in the above,

v0y=40m/ssin60°=40m/s32=34.6m.s

The horizontal component of velocity is given by,

v0x=v0cos60°

Substitute all the values in the above,

v0x=40m/scos60°=40m/s12=20m/s

Here, the vertical and horizontal of the velocity of the shell is 34.6 m/s and 20 m/s respectively.

04

(b) Determination of the time taken by the shell to reach the highest point.

The time taken by the shell to reach highest point is given by,

t=vy-v0yay

Here, vyis the velocity in at maximum height, v0yis the vertical component of velocity and ayis the vertical component of acceleration.

Substitute all the values in the above,

localid="1667623673661" t=0-34.6m/s-9.8m/s2=3.53s

Thus, the time taken by the shell to reach highest point is 3.53 s .

05

(c) Determination of the maximum height above the ground

The maximum height of the shell above the ground is given by,

vy2=v0y2+2ayhhmax=-v0y2-2g

Here, vyis the velocity in at maximum height, v0yis the vertical component of velocity and ay is the vertical component of acceleration denoted by g.

Substitute all the values in the above,

hmax=-34.6m/s2-2×9.8m/s2=61m

Thus, the maximum height of the shell above the ground is 61 m .

06

(d) Determination of the distance shell from its firing point:

The distance of shell from its firing point is given by,

d=2v0xt

Here, v0xis the horizontal component of shell’s velocity and t is the time taken to reach the peak point.

Substitute all the values in the above,

d=20m/s2×3.53s=141m

Thus, the distance of the shell landed from its firing point is 141 m .

07

(e) Determination of the horizontal and vertical components of its acceleration and velocity:

The horizontal acceleration of the shell is zero because there is no change in the horizontal velocity. The vertical component of the acceleration is the acceleration due to gravity acting on the shell which is given by,

ay=-g=-9.8m/s2

At the maximum height the final vertical and horizontal velocity of shell are given by,

v0y=0vx=v0y=20m/s

Thus, the final horizontal and vertical component of acceleration are zero and-9.8m/s2and the final vertical and horizontal component of velocity are zero and 20 m/s respectively.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

A bird is flying due east. Its distance from a tall building is given by

xt=28.0m+12.4m/st-0.0450m/s3t3.What is the instantaneous velocity of the bird when t = 8.00 s?

You are given two vectors A=3.00i^+6.00j^andB=7.00i^+2.00j^ . Let counter- clockwise angles be positive. (a) What angle doesA make with the +x-axis? (b) What angle doeslocalid="1662185215101" B make with the +x-axis? (c) Vectorlocalid="1662185222673" C is the sum of localid="1662185243350" Aandlocalid="1662185251585" B , so localid="1662185235469" C=A+BWhat angle does localid="1662185258976" Cmake with the +x-axis?

A jet fighter pilot wishes to accelerate from rest at a constant acceleration of to reach Mach 3 (three times the speed of sound) as quickly as possible. Experimental tests reveal that he will black out if this acceleration lasts for more than5.0s. Use331m/sfor the speed of sound. (a) Will the period of acceleration last long enough to cause him to black out? (b) What is the greatest speed he can reach with an acceleration ofbefore he blacks out?

A medical technician is trying to determine what percentage of a patient’s artery is blocked by plaque. To do this, she measures the blood pressure just before the region of blockage and finds that it is 1.20×104Pa, while in the region of blockage it is role="math" localid="1668168100834" 1.15×104Pa. Furthermore, she knows that blood flowing through the normal artery just before the point of blockage is traveling at 30.0 cm/s, and the specific gravity of this patient’s blood is 1.06. What percentage of the cross-sectional area of the patient’s artery is blocked by the plaque?

Rhea, one of Saturn’s moons, has a radius of 764 km and an acceleration due to gravity of 0.265 m/s2at its surface. Calculate its mass and average density.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free