Final answer:
The horizontal displacement of the other fragment is equal to the horizontal displacement of the shell before the explosion.
Step-by-step explanation:
To find the horizontal displacement of the shell when it explodes, we can analyze the projectile motion of the shell before the explosion and the subsequent vertical motion of the fragments after the explosion.
Before the explosion, the shell follows a parabolic trajectory which can be divided into horizontal and vertical components. The horizontal displacement can be found using the formula:
Horizontal displacement = initial horizontal velocity * time
After the explosion, one fragment drops straight down, so its horizontal displacement is zero. The other fragment continues to move horizontally with the same initial horizontal velocity as the shell and lands at a distance equal to the initial horizontal displacement of the shell.
Therefore, the horizontal displacement of the other fragment, assuming negligible air drag, is equal to the horizontal displacement of the shell before the explosion.