Motion in Two Dimensions - AP Physics 1

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Question

A home run derby is being held in a stadium where the home run wall is from home plate. The wall itself has a height of . The stands begin at the wall and with equal height, and rise at an angle of to the horizontal.

Neglect air resistance and assume

A batter hits a ball from a height of with an initial velocity of and an angle of . What is the horizontal distance traveled before it colliding with the stands/field?

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Answer

We can use the following piecewise function to determine the height of the ball as a function of the horizontal distance it has traveled:

If , then

If , then

First, we can guesstimate if the ball will land in the field in the stands or the field using the range equation:

Plugging in our values:

This means that the ball will reach its original height about 58 meters past the home run wall. Therefore, let's operate on the idea that the ball lands in the stands.

We can begin with the following kinematic equation:

Where we can define time as :

Where x is the horizontal distance traveled before the ball lands.

Substituting in expressions for our component velocities, we get:

Then substituting the 2nd expression into the first:

Now we can use the piecewise function above to replace final height or final distance. It will be much simpler to replace final height, so we'll do that:

Expanding the expression a bit:

Then rearranging, we get:

Plugging in values, we get:

Using the quadratic equation, we get:

Obviously our distance will be positive, so we will go with the second one:

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