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- Jan 31, 2011
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The question is:
Given the initial velocity, which of the following is the least amount of info that could be used to determine how far a projectile lands from a cannon?
A) time to travel, angle of elevation
B) acceleration of gravity
C) angle of elevation, acceleration of gravity
D) height of the peak of the projectile
The correct answer is B, but I said C.
The explanation given for why B is correct is that you can break the system down into X and Y components. However, how can you do this if you don't know the angle of elevation? You don't know the x-velocity or the y-velocity...
What do ya'll think?
Given the initial velocity, which of the following is the least amount of info that could be used to determine how far a projectile lands from a cannon?
A) time to travel, angle of elevation
B) acceleration of gravity
C) angle of elevation, acceleration of gravity
D) height of the peak of the projectile
The correct answer is B, but I said C.
The explanation given for why B is correct is that you can break the system down into X and Y components. However, how can you do this if you don't know the angle of elevation? You don't know the x-velocity or the y-velocity...
What do ya'll think?