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IHateMayonnaise
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Homework Statement
I'm attaching a drawing depicting the problem, hopefully the mods will approve it soon. In words: A ball is dropped from some height [itex]h_0[/itex] and hits a point on a wedge at some angle [itex]\theta[/itex] at some height up the wedge [itex]h^\prime[/itex]. Optimize [itex]h^\prime[/itex] and [itex]\theta[/itex] for which the range is maximized.
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
My first reaction is to use calculus of variations, however I'm not quite sure this is a viable option, as I don't really see any constraints that I could use to create some Lagrange multipliers. The problem basically boils down to "if someone throws a ball at an angle [itex]\theta[/itex] with an initial velocity [itex]v_0[/itex] while standing on a cliff of height [itex]h^\prime[/itex], find the max range."
The velocity can be found by conservations of energy:
[tex] mg(h_0-h^\prime) = 1/2 m v^2 \rightarrow v = \sqrt{2g(h_0-h^\prime)}[/tex]
Applying kinematics along the y-direction to get the time, then doing kinematics along the x direction I arrive at (haven't check this, but this isn't the problem):
[tex]
\Delta x = \frac{\sqrt{2g(h_0-h^\prime)}\cos\theta}{g} \left[\sqrt{2g(h_0-h^\prime)}\sin\theta - \sqrt{2gh_0\sin^2\theta + 2gh^\prime\cos^2\theta}\right]
[/tex]
Assuming this is correct, and I'm not saying it is, what would I do? How would I go about optimizing this? I am looking to find/optimize both [itex]h^\prime[/itex] and [itex]\theta[/itex]. Would I take the derivative with respect to [itex]h^\prime[/itex] and set it equal to zero to find the best value? Would there be an easier way?
Thanks yall
IHateMayonnaise
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