Ask Question
23 March, 16:31

1. A baseball player hits a baseball into the air with an initial vertical velocity of 72 feet per second from a height of 3 feet. (h = - 16t2 + 72t + s)

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 23 March, 17:18
    0
    You actually do not ask anything here, so i will find the equation for the height and i will use it to find something useful, like the maximum height of the baseball.

    For any object in a vertical motion, the only force acting on it is the gravitational force, so the acceleration of the object will be equal to g.

    a (t) = - g

    where the minus sign is because the gravitational acceleration pulls down.

    For the velocity we can integrate over time, and get:

    v (t) = - g*t + v0

    Where v0 is the initial velocity, in this case v0 = 72 ft/s

    v (t) = - g*t + 72ft/s

    with this equation we can find the time in wich the height is maximum, we need to find the time where the velocity is 0.

    -g*t + 72 = 0

    t = 72/g

    for the height we can integrate over time again:

    h (t) = (-g/2) * t^2 + 72ft/s*t + h0

    where h0 is the initial height, in this case h0 = 3ft

    here we can also replace the value of g = 32ft/s^2

    h (t) = (-16ft/s^2) * t^2 + 72ft/s*t + 3ft

    Now we can evaluate this in the time that we previously find, t = 72/g = 72/32 = 2.25s

    h (2.25s) = - 16*2.25^2 + 72*2.25 + 3 = 85.08 feet
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “1. A baseball player hits a baseball into the air with an initial vertical velocity of 72 feet per second from a height of 3 feet. (h = - ...” in 📘 Mathematics if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers