11. 0.75/1.53 points Previous Answers OsCol Phys2016 3.4.P.025 My Notes Ask Your Teacher A projecte ched at ground level
Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2022 5:29 pm
11. 0.75/1.53 points Previous Answers OsCol Phys2016 3.4.P.025 My Notes Ask Your Teacher A projecte ched at ground level with a speed of 45.0 ms at an angle of 25.0' above the horizontal. It strikes a target above the ground 2.70 seconds later. What are the x and y distances from where the projectile was launched to where it lands? x distance 10.46 m y distance A nal Materials
6. 0/1.53 points Previous Answers OSColPhys2016 3.3.WA.013.Tutorial My Notes Ask Your Teac A spaceship is traveling through deep space towards a space station and needs to make a course correction to go around a nebula. The captain orders the ship to travel 2.7 x 100 kilometers before 70 and r ing 11 x 10 meters before coming the path towards the space station. If the captain had not ordered a course correction, what would have been the magnitude (in meters and direction in degree counter wise from the of the path of the spaceship it had traveled through the nebula?
in degrees? Give the direction as an angle measured counterclockwise from the positive x-axis. (b) What is the magnitude, in meters, and what is the direction of vector magnitude direction (counterclockwise from the +x-axis)
6. 0/1.53 points Previous Answers OSColPhys2016 3.3.WA.013.Tutorial My Notes Ask Your Teac A spaceship is traveling through deep space towards a space station and needs to make a course correction to go around a nebula. The captain orders the ship to travel 2.7 x 100 kilometers before 70 and r ing 11 x 10 meters before coming the path towards the space station. If the captain had not ordered a course correction, what would have been the magnitude (in meters and direction in degree counter wise from the of the path of the spaceship it had traveled through the nebula?
in degrees? Give the direction as an angle measured counterclockwise from the positive x-axis. (b) What is the magnitude, in meters, and what is the direction of vector magnitude direction (counterclockwise from the +x-axis)