Answer: 3 seconds
60 or Sixty
The answer depends on whether the ball is thrown vertically upwards or downwards. That critical piece of information is not provided!
To find the velocity of the baseball, we use the formula: velocity = distance / time. In this case, the distance is 38m and the time is 1.7s. Plugging in these values, we get velocity = 38m / 1.7s = 22.35 m/s. Therefore, the velocity of the baseball thrown from third base is 22.35 meters per second.
The answer to the question on the worksheet is that 'He was thrown out at home.'
The probability is 146/1296 = 0.1127
Answer: 44 meters
The ball was thrown horizontally at 10 meters per sec, and the thrower's arm was 78.4 meters above the base of the cliff.
10 m/s
64 METERSA+
64 metersIf a ball is thrown horizontally at 20 m/s from the top of a cliff that is 50 meters high, the ball will strike the ground 64 m from the base of the cliff (20m/s x 3.2 s).
"3.2" or "3.20" please put all of that
It doesn't matter whether the object is thrown down, up, horizontally, or diagonally. Once it leaves the thrower's hand, it is accelerated downward by an amount equal to acceleration of gravity on the planet where this is all happening. On Earth, if you throw an object horizontally, it accelerates downward at the rate of 9.8 meters per second2 ... just as it would if you simply dropped it. Whether it's dropped or thrown horizontally, it hits the ground at the same time.
The rock will have a greater speed when it reaches the ground level compared to the ball thrown horizontally because the rock will be accelerated by gravity as it falls vertically, while the ball thrown horizontally will only have its initial horizontal velocity.
The time the ball was in the air can be calculated using the horizontal distance it traveled and its initial horizontal velocity. Time = distance / velocity. In this case, time = 45m / 15 m/s = 3 seconds.
if the bal is thrown by making 45 degree angles. with the ground..it will travel maximum distance...
They should reach the ground together, since their initial vertical speed is the same, namely zero.
False. Both objects will hit the ground at the same time, regardless of whether one is dropped vertically and the other is thrown horizontally, given that gravity is the only force acting on them.