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EXAMPLES FOR EXAM II Section 12.3

If it is not already on your hard drive, you will need to download the free DPGraph Viewer to view some of the pictures linked to on this page.   QuickTime 7 free download.
   

Click here to see a path animated with its position function vectors, velocity function vectors, and acceleration function vectors.  Here is a second, similar demonstration.  Here is a third such demonstration involving vectors in space.  This fourth demonstrates a spiral in space.  Here is one demonstrating a Lissajous figure and a 3-D demo combining Lissajous and spiral.

Projectile Motion Example

A projectile is launched from ground level at an angle of 45o with the horizontal and with an initial velocity of 64 feet per second.  A television camera is located in the plane of the path of the projectile 50 feet behind the launch site.

Parametric equations for the path of the projectile in terms of the parameter t representing time are

Some of the basic things we can easily compute are the maximum height attained by the projectile and the range of the projectile.

The graph in red below represents the path of the projectile and the blue point moving along the graph in red represents the projectile.  The length of the vertical blue line segment at x = -50 represents the measure of angle a (the angle the camera makes with the horizontal) in degrees

animation of the projectile motion and changing angle a

The angle a that the camera makes with the horizontal is given by

Below is a graph of the measure of angle a in degrees as a function of time (t).

Notice that a is not a maximum at the same time that y is a maximum.


 
Animation For Section 12.3, Example 6

A baseball is hit 3 feet above the ground at 100 feet per second and at an angle of 45o with respect to the ground.  Find the maximum height reached by the baseball.  Will it clear a 10 foot high fence located 300 feet from home plate?  The solution can be found in your textbook.  Click on the picture at the right to see the animation.  Quicktime Animation    Quicktime Animation Extended

 

 


 
Section 12.3 #34 (similar--yards changed to feet)

The quarterback of a football team releases a pass at the height of 7 feet above the playing field, and the football is caught by a receiver 30 feet directly downfield at a height of 4 feet.  The pass is released at an angle of 35o with the horizontal.

Click on the picture to see an animation.  In my animation the receiver is 20 feet directly downfield when the quarterback releases the football.

Quicktime version

(a)  Find the speed of the football when it is released.

(b)  Find the maximum height of the football.

(c)  Find the time the receiver has to reach the proper position after the quarterback releases the football.

The receiver has approximately 1.2249 seconds to reach the proper position after the quarterback releases the football.

Highlights of the Solution to Section 12.3 #34

(The difference is that the 30 feet is 30 yards.)

Animation for the original problem          Quicktime Version

 


 
Section 12.3 #36

 
The Path of the Bomb with Air Resistance

The picture below shows the path the bomb would take if we do not neglect air resistance but rather take air resistance as proportional to velocity (of the bomb), i.e., r = kv.  The time interval is the length of time it takes the bomb to hit the ground neglecting air resistance (approximately 43.3 seconds).  The successive values for r in the graph, from left to right, are: 0.1, 0.08, 0.06, 0.04, 0.02, 0.01, 0.  Click on the picture below to see a similar picture that also includes the paths corresponding to r = 0.4 and r =0.2.  The bomb falls very slowly if r = 0.4.

 

The graph below is a graph of the endpoints of paths such as those shown above as r goes from 0.000001 to 3.

 


Lawn Sprinkler

Here is an example of the lawn sprinkler problem found in the exercises (61) for Section 3.1 (It is a Calculus III problem.).  In the example here the speed of the water is 16 ft/sec so the distance the water travels horizontally is given by

           

and the path the water takes through the air is given by

         

Can you see why (neglecting air resistance)?  Answer

Click here to see an animation for this problem and click here for an animation with scales.  Would this sort of lawn sprinkler water the lawn uniformly?  Answer   For more information on the "calculus of lawn sprinklers" see the article "Design of an Oscillating Sprinkler" by Bart Braden in Mathematics Magazine.  You can view the article at matharticles.com.


 
EC

The picture at the right shows the paths of a projectile launched from sea level with an initial speed of 48 ft/sec.  The projectile has been launched in the direction of a gully whose flat bottom is 192 feet lower than the spot from which the projectile was launched.  The blue path corresponds to a launch angle of 60 degrees.  The red path corresponds to a launch angle of 45 degrees.  The green path corresponds to the launch angle that maximizes the horizontal distance traveled by the projectile.  The black path corresponds to a launch angle of 0 degrees.  The extra credit is to approximate the radian measure of the launch angle for the green path (6 significant digits), give the approximate degree measure (4 significant digits), and approximate the horizontal distance traveled (6 significant digits) for the green path.  Air resistance is being ignored.  Click on the picture to see an animation showing the path of the projectile as the launch angle varies from zero to almost ninety degrees.  Quicktime version of the animation

Maple Version of the Animation    Quicktime Maple Version

Maple Worksheet for the Maple Animation

 


 

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        Lane Vosbury, Mathematics, Seminole State College   email:  vosburyl@seminolestate.edu

        This page was last updated on 08/21/14          Copyright 2002          webstats