Shadowdude
Cult of Personality
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2009
- Messages
- 12,145
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2010
I tried my "professional" way of solving a question to the effect of:
I then applied 'tan' (the trigonometric ratio), and got an answer 0.4m from the actual answer.
How do I do it 'properly' and get rid of that 0.4m error?
Sorry that I couldn't find the actual question...
A cannon is placed on a hill 50m above the sea, at an angle of 45 to the horizontal. If a cannonball is fired at 25m/s at the angle, what is the full range of the flight?
Now what I did was I calculated normal range "d = u(x) . t". Then, I figured that if the cannonball was launched at 45, as long as it landed on a parallel surface to the original place of projection - it too would land at an angle of 45.
I then applied 'tan' (the trigonometric ratio), and got an answer 0.4m from the actual answer.
How do I do it 'properly' and get rid of that 0.4m error?
Sorry that I couldn't find the actual question...