HC Verma Chapter 3 Problem 50 — Projectile speed at a given height

Problem Statement

Solve the kinematics problem: A projectile is fired at $u = 20$ m/s, $\theta = 60°$. Find the speed when the vertical component of velocity equals the horizontal component. ($g = 10$ m/s²) $v_x = u\cos\theta$; $v_y = u\sin\theta – gt$; condition $v_y = v_x$ Step 1: $v_x = 20\cos 60° = 10$ m/s. Step 2: $v_y = v_x = 10$ m/s: $20\s

Given Information

  • See problem statement for all given quantities.

Physical Concepts & Formulas

Projectile motion decomposes into independent horizontal and vertical components. Horizontal: constant velocity (no air resistance). Vertical: constant downward acceleration $g$. The trajectory is a parabola. Maximum range occurs at $45°$ launch angle; max height at $90°$.

  • $x = v_0\cos\theta \cdot t$, $y = v_0\sin\theta \cdot t – \frac{1}{2}gt^2$
  • $R = v_0^2\sin 2\theta/g$ — horizontal range
  • $H = v_0^2\sin^2\theta/(2g)$ — maximum height
  • $T = 2v_0\sin\theta/g$ — total flight time

Step-by-Step Solution

Step 1 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.

Step 2 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.

Step 3 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.

Worked Calculation

Full substitution shown in the steps above.

Answer

$$\boxed{R = \dfrac{u^2\sin 2\theta}{g},\quad H = \dfrac{u^2\sin^2\theta}{2g}}$$

Physical Interpretation

The trajectory is a parabola because gravity provides constant downward acceleration while horizontal velocity remains constant (absent air resistance). Real projectiles deviate due to drag, especially at high speeds.


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