What is the height of the cliff above the water?

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To find the height of the cliff, the rock's initial velocity is 8.3 m/s downward, and it falls for 6.9 seconds. The relevant equation to use is Δd = v1 Δt + 1/2 a (Δt)², where a is the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s²). Substituting the values into the equation will yield the height of the cliff above the water. The calculations confirm that this method provides the correct height measurement. The discussion emphasizes understanding the physics principles and applying them correctly to solve the problem.
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Homework Statement



You throw a rock off a cliff, giving it a velocity of 8.3 m/s straight down. At the instant you released the rock, your hiking buddy started a stopwatch. The rock hit the water below exactly 6.9 seconds after you threw the rock. How high is the cliff above the water?

Homework Equations



Δd = 1(v1+v2)Δt
2
2aΔd = v2^2 - v1^2

Δd = v1 Δt + 1/2 a (Δt)2

Δd = v2 Δt - 1/2 a (Δt)2

The Attempt at a Solution



I am assuming that the v1 is 0 because it starts from rest and v2 is -8.3m/s. (Sign convention was down negative.) and time was 6.9. I subbed everything into the equation. When I make everything equal to Δd, does that give me the height of the cliff above the river?
 
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All you need is the s = ut + 1/2at^2
But the initial velocity u=8.3 and a=g=9.8m/s^2
Don't try and remember the sign convention, think about would S get bigger or smaller with time, would a large U reduce/increase S.
 
So, it would be:

D = (8.3m/s)(6.9s) + 1/2 (9.80/ms^2)(6.9s)^2

Work it out and the D would give me the height?
 
Yes (and some more unnecessary text to make the anwer longer than 4 characters otherwise the forum software rejects it )
 
Thanks a lot this si a great help. Do you think you can help me with the other question I have posted?
 
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