- #1
spj1
- 7
- 0
This free fall problem seems simple, but I can't get it.
you have a rocket fired from rest with an acceleration of 40 m/s^2. It runs for 2.5 and then falls.
I'm wanting to find the maximum height, which I think would require me getting the initial velocity first.
v = v0 + at
0 = v0 + 40(2.5)
v0 = -100 (wrong, it's going up?)
then I thought just plugging into the equation x = x0 + v0t + .5at^2 would work, but the v0 is obviously wrong. I don't see what I'm doing wrong, though. The answer should be 635m.
Can anyone point out where I'm going wrong?
you have a rocket fired from rest with an acceleration of 40 m/s^2. It runs for 2.5 and then falls.
I'm wanting to find the maximum height, which I think would require me getting the initial velocity first.
v = v0 + at
0 = v0 + 40(2.5)
v0 = -100 (wrong, it's going up?)
then I thought just plugging into the equation x = x0 + v0t + .5at^2 would work, but the v0 is obviously wrong. I don't see what I'm doing wrong, though. The answer should be 635m.
Can anyone point out where I'm going wrong?