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17 votes
17 votes
Jennifer serves the volleyball to Marsha with an upward velocity of 10.5 ft/s. The ball is 5 feet above the ground when she strikes it. How long does Marsha have to

react, before the volleyball hits the ground? Round your answer to two decimal

User GoRGon
by
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1 Answer

10 votes
10 votes

Answer:

0.98 seconds

Explanation:

We assume the height of the volleyball is described by the equation for ballistic motion. We want to find the time it takes for the height to become zero.

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motion equation

The general form of the equation of height for ballistic motion is ...


h(t)=-16t^2+v_0t+h_0\qquad\text{$v_0$ and $h_0$ are the initial velocity and height}

The coefficient 16 in the equation is an approximation of 1/2g, where g is the acceleration due to gravity in ft/s². This means the units of time and distance are expected to be seconds and feet.

For the problem at hand, the initial velocity and height are 10.5 ft/s and 5 ft. Then the height equation is ...

h(t) = -16t² +10.5t +5

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reaction time

Marsha has until the ball hits the ground to react to the serve. To find out how long that is, we need to solve the height equation for t when h=0. This is most easily done using the quadratic formula with ...

  • a = -16
  • b = 10.5
  • c = 5

The solution is ...


t=(-b\pm√(b^2-4ac))/(2a)= (-10.5\pm√(10.5^2-4(-16)(5)))/(2(-16))\\\\=(10.5\pm√(430.25))/(32)=(21\pm√(1721))/(64)

The positive solution is ...

t ≈ 0.976327 ≈ 0.98

Marsha has about 0.98 seconds to react before the volleyball hits the ground.

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Additional comment

After about 0.33 seconds, Marsha knows she doesn't need to react at all. The serve will not clear the net. Its maximum height is about 6' 8 5/8". A women's volleyball net is 7' 4 1/8" high. Jennifer's serve velocity must be at least 12.3 ft/s for the ball to go over the net. With that upward velocity, Marsha has about 1.06 seconds to react.

Jennifer serves the volleyball to Marsha with an upward velocity of 10.5 ft/s. The-example-1
User Hrr
by
2.9k points
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