53.9k views
2 votes
In an action movie, a stuntman leaps from the top of one building to the top of another building 5.2 m away. After a running start, he leaps at a velocity of 6.0 m/s at an angle of 15° above horizontal. Will he make it to the other roof, which is 2.9 m shorter than the building he jumps from?

User SCdF
by
8.2k points

1 Answer

4 votes
stuntman's vertical velocity is vy= 6 sin 15=1.55m/s. Height that he goes up is, vertical kinetic energy = mgh 1/2 v² = gh, h=v²/(2g)=0.12 m. time wanted to go up= vy/9.8=0.16s, Time to fall through a height 0.12+2.9=3.02m is t=sqrt(3.02*2/9.8)=0.78 s Total time needed to go up and down is 0.78+0.16=0.94 s. to calculate the horizontal range, Horizontal velocity = 6 cos 15=5.8 m/s. Distance which he can cover is 5.8*0.94=5.44 m. If the distance between the two building is less than 5.44 m then he will be safe and he can jump that distance.
User David Berger
by
8.0k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.