A ball is thrown vertically upwards with a speed of 29ms^-1. It hits the ground 6 seconds later. By modelling the ball as a particle find the height above the ground from which it was thrown.
v=u+at
So, 0=29+(-)9.81*x
-29/-9.81= t = 2.956s for the upward part of the journey.
For the downward bit:
t=6-2.956 = 3.04s to the ground.
Distance for the downward bit [i.e the max height]:
s=ut+.5at^2
=0*3.04 + .5x9.81x3.04^2
= 45.33m
Count the upward part as downwards to make it easier [make everything positive i.e downwards. as everything accelerates due to gravity at the same rate as it de-accelerates due to gravity]
s=.5(u+v)t
=.5*29*2.956
=42.86m
45.33-42.86 = 2.74m
Quite how you're supposed to model that as a particle im not sure
according to the book the answer's 2.4 thanks for the help though i'll leave that one blank and get my "teacher" to explain it to me... god further maths is hard.
I was good at Maths when you actually add up numbers, when algebra was thrown in i didn't do quite as well, watching you work that out gave me a brain fart.
You don't even really need to use SUVAT - if acceleration due to gravity is 9.81m/s it's easy to work it out.
EDIT:
29 ÷ 9.81 = 2.956... = Z = After Z seconds it's stopped at the maximum height, velocity of 0.
Assuming an average speed of 14.5 m/s (average of 29 & 0) between original point and max height, starting point is 42.864... M below the max height.
The downward journey must therefore take 3.043... seconds (6-Z), which would mean it would hit the ground at 29.86 m/s. Again assuming an average speed of 14.93m/s we can tell the distance from the max height to the floor is 45.444... M.
Subtracting the original point -> max height distance from this we get...
Height above the ground from which the ball was thrown, h
= sd - su
= 45.3m-42.9m
= 2.4m (exactly)
Edit: is this for GCSE level? I'd be uncomfortable rounding intermediate results like that in GCE A-levels and beyond even if the question told me to. My physics teacher would have gotten a right fit if anything but the final answer was rounded any more than to 3dp