A batter hits a ball and it is caught 4 seconds later 100 meters from home plate. What is the initial velocity of the ball?

Well, I can give you the formula to calculate it! The initial velocity (v0) can be found using the equation:

v0 = (v - at)

Where:
- v0 is the initial velocity
- v is the final velocity (which is 0, as the ball comes to a stop)
- a is the acceleration (which is also 0, as there is no acceleration)
- t is the time taken (4 seconds)

So, if we plug in the values, we get:

v0 = (0 - 0 * 4)
v0 = 0

Seems like the initial velocity is zero! Maybe this ball was lazy and forgot to get moving.

To find the initial velocity of the ball, we can use the equation of motion:

๐‘‘ = ๐‘ฃ๐‘–๐‘›๐‘–๐‘ก + 0.5๐‘Ž๐‘กยฒ

Where:
- d is the distance traveled by the ball (100 meters)
- vแตขโ‚™แตข is the initial velocity (what we want to find)
- t is the time taken (4 seconds)
- a is the acceleration (which we assume to be 0 since we have no information about it)

Rearranging the equation, we get:

๐‘ฃ๐‘–๐‘›๐‘– = (๐‘‘ - 0.5๐‘Ž๐‘กยฒ) / ๐‘ก

Substituting the given values, we have:

๐‘ฃ๐‘–๐‘›๐‘– = (100 - 0.5 * 0 * 4ยฒ) / 4
= (100 - 0) / 4
= 100 / 4
= 25 meters per second

Therefore, the initial velocity of the ball is 25 meters per second.

horizontal velocity=100/4 m/s

vertical velocity:
viv*4=1/2 g 4^2
or vertical velocity=1/2 g *16/4=2*9.8

velocityinitial= sqrt(verticalvel^2+horizvel^2)

A batter hits a ball and it is caught 4 seconds later 100 meters from home plate. What is the initial velocity of the ball?