Concept explainers
Free-throw Shots According to physicist Peter Brancazio, the key to a successful foul shot in basketball lies in the arc of the shot. Brancazio determined the optimal angle of the arc from the free-throw line to be 45 degrees. The arc also depends on the velocity with which the ball is shot. If a player shoots a foul shot, releasing the ball at a 45-degree angle from a position 6 feet above the floor, then the path of the ball can be modeled by the function
where is the height of the ball above the floor, is the forward distance of the ball in front of the foul line, and is the initial velocity with which the ball is shot in feet per second. Suppose a player shoots a ball with an initial velocity of 28 feet per second.
(a) Determine the height of the ball after it has traveled 8 feet in front of the foul line.
(b) Determine the height of the ball after it has traveled 12 feet in front of the foul line.
(c) Find additional points and graph the path of the basketball.
(d) The center of the hoop is 10 feet above the floor and 15 feet in front of the foul line. Will the ball go through the hoop? Why or why not? If not, with what initial velocity must the ball be shot in order for the ball to go through the hoop?
Source: The Physics of Foul Shots, Discover, Vol. 21, No. 10, October 2000
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 2 Solutions
MML PRECALCULUS ENHANCED
- 60! 5!.7!.15!.33!arrow_forward• • Let > be a potential for the vector field F = (−2 y³, −6 xy² − 4 z³, −12 yz² + 4 2). Then the value of sin((-1.63, 2.06, 0.57) – (0,0,0)) is - 0.336 -0.931 -0.587 0.440 0.902 0.607 -0.609 0.146arrow_forwardThe value of cos(4M) where M is the magnitude of the vector field with potential ƒ = e² sin(лy) cos(π²) at x = 1, y = 1/4, z = 1/3 is 0.602 -0.323 0.712 -0.816 0.781 0.102 0.075 0.013arrow_forward
- There is exactly number a and one number b such that the vector field F = conservative. For those values of a and b, the value of cos(a) + sin(b) is (3ay + z, 3ayz + 3x, −by² + x) is -0.961 -0.772 -1.645 0.057 -0.961 1.764 -0.457 0.201arrow_forwardA: Tan Latitude / Tan P A = Tan 04° 30'/ Tan 77° 50.3' A= 0.016960 803 S CA named opposite to latitude, except when hour angle between 090° and 270°) B: Tan Declination | Sin P B Tan 052° 42.1'/ Sin 77° 50.3' B = 1.34 2905601 SCB is alway named same as declination) C = A + B = 1.35 9866404 S CC correction, A+/- B: if A and B have same name - add, If different name- subtract) = Tan Azimuth 1/Ccx cos Latitude) Tan Azimuth = 0.737640253 Azimuth = S 36.4° E CAzimuth takes combined name of C correction and Hour Angle - If LHA is between 0° and 180°, it is named "west", if LHA is between 180° and 360° it is named "east" True Azimuth= 143.6° Compass Azimuth = 145.0° Compass Error = 1.4° West Variation 4.0 East Deviation: 5.4 Westarrow_forwardds 5. Find a solution to this initial value problem: 3t2, s(0) = 5. dt 6. Find a solution to this initial value problem: A' = 0.03A, A(0) = 100.arrow_forward
- 2) Drive the frequency responses of the following rotor system with Non-Symmetric Stator. The system contains both external and internal damping. Show that the system loses the reciprocity property.arrow_forward1) Show that the force response of a MDOF system with general damping can be written as: X liax) -Σ = ral iw-s, + {0} iw-s,arrow_forward3) Prove that in extracting real mode ø, from a complex measured mode o, by maximizing the function: maz | ቀÇቃ | ||.|| ||.||2 is equivalent to the solution obtained from the followings: max Real(e)||2arrow_forward
- Draw the unit circle and plot the point P=(8,2). Observe there are TWO lines tangent to the circle passing through the point P. Answer the questions below with 3 decimal places of accuracy. L1 (a) The line L₁ is tangent to the unit circle at the point 0.992 (b) The tangent line 4₁ has equation: y= 0.126 x +0.992 (c) The line L₂ is tangent to the unit circle at the point ( (d) The tangent line L₂ has equation: y= 0.380 x + x × x)arrow_forwardThe cup on the 9th hole of a golf course is located dead center in the middle of a circular green which is 40 feet in radius. Your ball is located as in the picture below. The ball follows a straight line path and exits the green at the right-most edge. Assume the ball travels 8 ft/sec. Introduce coordinates so that the cup is the origin of an xy-coordinate system and start by writing down the equations of the circle and the linear path of the ball. Provide numerical answers below with two decimal places of accuracy. 50 feet green ball 40 feet 9 cup ball path rough (a) The x-coordinate of the position where the ball enters the green will be (b) The ball will exit the green exactly seconds after it is hit. (c) Suppose that L is a line tangent to the boundary of the golf green and parallel to the path of the ball. Let Q be the point where the line is tangent to the circle. Notice that there are two possible positions for Q. Find the possible x-coordinates of Q: smallest x-coordinate =…arrow_forwardDraw the unit circle and plot the point P=(8,2). Observe there are TWO lines tangent to the circle passing through the point P. Answer the questions below with 3 decimal places of accuracy. P L1 L (a) The line L₁ is tangent to the unit circle at the point (b) The tangent line L₁ has equation: X + (c) The line L₂ is tangent to the unit circle at the point ( (d) The tangent line 42 has equation: y= x + ).arrow_forward
- Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGALElementary Geometry For College Students, 7eGeometryISBN:9781337614085Author:Alexander, Daniel C.; Koeberlein, Geralyn M.Publisher:Cengage,Elementary Geometry for College StudentsGeometryISBN:9781285195698Author:Daniel C. Alexander, Geralyn M. KoeberleinPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Trigonometry (MindTap Course List)TrigonometryISBN:9781337278461Author:Ron LarsonPublisher:Cengage LearningAlgebra and Trigonometry (MindTap Course List)AlgebraISBN:9781305071742Author:James Stewart, Lothar Redlin, Saleem WatsonPublisher:Cengage LearningAlgebra & Trigonometry with Analytic GeometryAlgebraISBN:9781133382119Author:SwokowskiPublisher:Cengage