Height reached = 3.7 metres.The mass of the ball is not really relevant.
the terminal velocity is the total speed that its take an object to reach the point it required from the initial velocity
Ignoring air resistance, I get this formula:Maximum height of a vertically-launched object = 1.5 square of initial speed/GI could be wrong. In that case, the unused portion of my fee will be cheerfully refunded.
The time taken by the ball to reach the maximum height is 1 second. The maximum height reached by the ball is 36 meters.
algebra 2 right? i hated that unit man i forgot everything we learned in that class
yes
Terminal velocity.
Take an accelerometer with you when you jump, and at the point that it reads, "zero", the terminal velocity has been reached.
Yes, several manned vehicles have reached escape velocity, which is about 25,000 miles per hour. The Apollo spacecraft used during the moon missions reached escape velocity en route to the moon. Also, the Space Shuttle reached escape velocity when it orbited the Earth or traveled to the International Space Station.
When the velocity stops changing, then, by definition, the acceleration is zero.
When terminal velocity is reached, the gravitational force is balanced with the force of resistance.
That is called terminal velocity.That is called terminal velocity.That is called terminal velocity.That is called terminal velocity.
Perhaps you mean Terminal Velocity, as in a parachute fall? This is the maximum speed reached in the fall. Final velocity will be zero, assuming you arrive on the ground.