A stone is thrown straight up from the edge of a roof, 1000 feet above the ground, at a speed of 12 feet per second. A. Remembering that the acceleration due to gravity is -32ft/sec², how high is the stone 6 seconds later? Answer: feet. B. At what time does the stone hit the ground? Answer: sec C. What is the velocity of the stone when it hits the ground? Answer: ft/sec.
Displacement, Velocity and Acceleration
In classical mechanics, kinematics deals with the motion of a particle. It deals only with the position, velocity, acceleration, and displacement of a particle. It has no concern about the source of motion.
Linear Displacement
The term "displacement" refers to when something shifts away from its original "location," and "linear" refers to a straight line. As a result, “Linear Displacement” can be described as the movement of an object in a straight line along a single axis, for example, from side to side or up and down. Non-contact sensors such as LVDTs and other linear location sensors can calculate linear displacement. Non-contact sensors such as LVDTs and other linear location sensors can calculate linear displacement. Linear displacement is usually measured in millimeters or inches and may be positive or negative.
![A stone is thrown straight up from the edge of a roof, 1000 feet above the ground, at a speed of 12 feet per second.
**A.** Remembering that the acceleration due to gravity is \(-32 \text{ft/sec}^2\), how high is the stone 6 seconds later?
Answer: __________ feet.
**B.** At what time does the stone hit the ground?
Answer: __________ sec
**C.** What is the velocity of the stone when it hits the ground?
Answer: __________ ft/sec.](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F131cc8df-1e0c-4cc0-a710-15de6c1d2fb3%2Fb1b332b2-5af7-4daa-a462-5a1a54e56d1e%2F76w4usd_processed.png&w=3840&q=75)
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