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Encyclopedia Galactica => Science => : G3CK0 October 04, 2012, 03:03:32 AM

: Math help please?
: G3CK0 October 04, 2012, 03:03:32 AM
Hey there. I got a little homework problem and I hope that someone can help me out  :P

The question is: If a rubber ball can bounce back to 90% of its original height, what is the total vertical distance that it will travel if it is dropped from an elevation of 40 feet?

Thanks a lot.
: Re: Math help please?
: lucid October 04, 2012, 03:41:25 AM
76ft
: Re: Math help please?
: Z3R0 October 04, 2012, 03:47:55 AM
76ft
@OP, I concur with lucid's deduction. Granted that we are calculating the total distance traveled from one bounce between two inert points of starting and stopping.
: Re: Math help please?
: lucid October 04, 2012, 03:54:35 AM
That's what I'm assuming. Otherwise it's 36ft.
: Re: Math help please?
: G3CK0 October 04, 2012, 03:56:56 AM
You guys are a great help <3.

But the thing is that I have to show my work, so is there a specific formula where you got the result from or do I just write the result straight ahead?
: Re: Math help please?
: lucid October 04, 2012, 03:58:27 AM
What the question is basically asking is; What is ninety percent of forty, plus forty.

I didn't really use a formula other than that. I just did it in my head.
: Re: Math help please?
: G3CK0 October 04, 2012, 04:04:20 AM
Why's it plus 40 after the percentage?
: Re: Math help please?
: lucid October 04, 2012, 04:07:55 AM
If I understood the question right you are asking how far does it travel from where you dropped it(40ft up) to it hitting the ground and bouncing 90 percent back up. So that's forty feet down, and thirty six feet up.
: Re: Math help please?
: G3CK0 October 04, 2012, 04:12:08 AM
Ah, thank you very much for your time. :D
: Re: Math help please?
: s3my0n October 04, 2012, 10:21:56 AM
Some working out:

s = 40 f
S(total) = ?

S(total) = s + 0.9s = 1.9s = 1.9 * 40 = 76 f
: Re: Math help please?
: p_2001 October 04, 2012, 10:44:13 AM
No.. The ball does not stop after one bounce..
after first bounce it will rise to 36.ft.. Then ninety percent of 36 ft... And so on... The royal well be like..

40+36+36+36*.9 + 36*.9 + 36*.9*.9 + 36*.9*.9 and so on..
It will be a GP.. And you need to apply infinite gp..
Find the formula for summation yourself.
: Re: Math help please?
: s3my0n October 04, 2012, 11:34:33 AM
No.. The ball does not stop after one bounce..
after first bounce it will rise to 36.ft.. Then ninety percent of 36 ft... And so on... The royal well be like..

40+36+36+36*.9 + 36*.9 + 36*.9*.9 + 36*.9*.9 and so on..
It will be a GP.. And you need to apply infinite gp..
Find the formula for summation yourself.

True that, I got misdirected by the previous answers x]

Then it would be:
(http://i45.tinypic.com/xgifpz.png)

Where:
x = original height
k = percentage change each bounce (%/100)


UPDATE:


The above formula is the same as:
(http://i47.tinypic.com/29o3nk1.png)


And Newton found that that will equal to:
(http://i45.tinypic.com/6puqzq.png)


So the answer to the problem is 40/(1-0.9) = 400 feet :D
: Re: Math help please?
: p_2001 October 04, 2012, 12:25:23 PM
True that, I got misdirected by the previous answers x]

Then it would be:
(http://i45.tinypic.com/xgifpz.png)

Where:
x = original height
k = percentage change each bounce (%/100)


UPDATE:


The above formula is the same as:
(http://i47.tinypic.com/29o3nk1.png)


And Newton found that that will equal to:
(http://i45.tinypic.com/6puqzq.png)


So the answer to the problem is 40/(1-0.9) = 400 feet :D

No, a bit more tricky..
See.. The ball travels TWICE .. Read what i wrote..once it goes up and then the same distance down...
So it will be..
400+400-40... = 760..

Also i would say it is hw help.. No need to give out formulas here :).. Let the op do some work.
: Re: Math help please?
: lucid October 04, 2012, 07:40:34 PM
I considered this but I assumed the question was asking how far in one bounce.
: Re: Math help please?
: p_2001 October 04, 2012, 08:15:25 PM
I considered this but I assumed the question was asking how far in one bounce.
The Question said "total vertical distance"..
It said ball is dropped and hence only dropped not picked or caught after one bounce.
: Re: Math help please?
: Z3R0 October 05, 2012, 12:37:29 AM
This is exactly why I always hated the way classes are taught in America. Because the questions are so fuckig obscure that you rarely know what is being asked of you.
: Re: Math help please?
: DangerousLlama October 05, 2012, 12:50:47 AM
This is exactly why I always hated the way classes are taught in America. Because the questions are so fuckig obscure that you rarely know what is being asked of you.


its like that in the UK too. I can remember countless examples of exam questions I got wrong because I mistook what they were asking.