University Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780133969290
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 2, Problem 2.87CP
In the vertical jump, an athlete starts from a crouch and jumps upward as high as possible. Even the best athletes spend little more than 1.00 s in the air (their “hang time”). Treat the athlete as a particle and let ymax be his maximum height above the floor. To explain why he seems to hang in the air, calculate the ratio of the time he is above ymax/2 to the time it takes him to go from the floor to that height. Ignore air resistance.
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In the vertical jump, an Kobe Bryant starts from a crouch and jumps upward to reach as high as possible. Even the best athletes spend little more than 1.00 ss in the air (their "hang time"). Treat Kobe as a particle and let ymaxymax be his maximum height above the floor. Note: this isn't the entire story since Kobe can twist and curl up in the air, but then we can no longer treat him as a particle.
Hint: Find v0 to reach y_max in terms of g and y_max and recall the velocity at y_max is zero. Then find v1 to reach y_max/2 with the same kinematic equation. The time to reach y_max is obtained from v0=g (t), and the time to reach y_max/2 is given by v1-v0= -g(t1). Now, t1 is the time to reach y_max/2, and the quantity t-t1 is the time to go from y_max/2 to y_max. You want the ratio of (t-t1)/t1
To explain why he seems to hang in the air, calculate the ratio of the time he is above ymax/2ymax/2 moving up to the time it takes him to go from the floor to that height. You may ignore…
The figure here shows the speed v versus height y of a ball tossed directly upward, along a y axis. Distance d is 0.37 m. The speed at height yA is vA. The speed at height yB is vA/3. What is speed vA?
If an egg is dropped from rest and takes 0.8 seconds to hit the ground, what is the height, in meters, that it was dropped from (neglecting air resistance)?
Use h=(1/2)gt^2. , where g = 9.8 m/s^2 (you can round to 10 m/s). Just provide a number in your answer, not units.
Chapter 2 Solutions
University Physics (14th Edition)
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