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A cannonball is shot straight upward with a velocity of 80 ft/sec. Its height after t seconds is given by f (t) = 80t - 16 t to the second power. Round your answers to 1 decimal place if necessary.

How high will the cannon ball go?
How many seconds will it take to reach this maximum height?

User Yeni
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1 Answer

3 votes

Check the picture below, so the ball's path is pretty much like so, and it reaches its hightest at its vertex, so


~~~~~~\textit{initial velocity in feet} \\\\ h(t) = -16t^2+v_ot+h_o \quad \begin{cases} v_o=\textit{initial velocity}&80\\ \qquad \textit{of the object}\\ h_o=\textit{initial height}&0\\ \qquad \textit{of the object}\\ h=\textit{object's height}&h\\ \qquad \textit{at


\textit{vertex of a vertical parabola, using coefficients} \\\\ y=\stackrel{\stackrel{a}{\downarrow }}{-16}x^2\stackrel{\stackrel{b}{\downarrow }}{+80}x\stackrel{\stackrel{c}{\downarrow }}{+0} \qquad \qquad \left(-\cfrac{ b}{2 a}~~~~ ,~~~~ c-\cfrac{ b^2}{4 a}\right)


\left(-\cfrac{ 80}{2(-16)}~~~~ ,~~~~ 0-\cfrac{ (80)^2}{4(-16)}\right) \implies \left( - \cfrac{ 80 }{ -32 }~~,~~0 - \cfrac{ 6400 }{ -64 } \right) \\\\\\ \left( \cfrac{5}{2}~~,~~100 \right)\implies \underset{~\hfill feet ~~ }{\stackrel{seconds\qquad }{\left( 2(1)/(2)~~,~~100 \right)}}

A cannonball is shot straight upward with a velocity of 80 ft/sec. Its height after-example-1
User Bernie Habermeier
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