Drop a Ball from a Height of 1 Meter

Drop a Ball from a Height of 1 Meter

<p>Drop a ball from a height of 1 meter. Determine the return height of the ball after the first bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the second bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the third bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the fourth bounce. Use several trials.</p><p>Repeat experiment from three other given heights – see Graphic Organizer</p><p>Graph the average of the results for each iteration of the experiment. The x axis should represent which return (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc). The y-axis should represent the average height of the return.</p><p>Determine what percentage of the previous bounce’s height is the next bounce’s height. (Ex. If average of the first bounce was 45 cm and the average of the second bounce was 36 cm, then the 36 percent of bounce would be determined by dividing 36 by 45, or 75% 45 Use the Graphic Organizer to gather the data. Example: Bounce # - height Return Height Percent return Initial height 45cm 36 cm 75 1 – 36 cm 30 cm 83 2 – 30 cm 24 cm 80 3 – 24 cm 16 cm 67 4 – 16 cm 10 cm 63 Find the average percent return. Average = 73.6</p><p>Drop a ball from a height of 1 meter. Determine the return height of the ball after the first bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the second bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the third bounce. Use several trials. Determine the return height of the ball after the fourth bounce. Use several trials.</p><p>Repeat experiment from three other given heights – see Graphic Organizer</p><p>Graph the average of the results for each iteration of the experiment. The x axis should represent which return (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc). The y-axis should represent the average height of the return.</p><p>Determine what percentage of the previous bounce’s height is the next bounce’s height. (Ex. If average of the first bounce was 45 cm and the average of the second bounce was 36 cm, then the 36 percent of bounce would be determined by dividing 36 by 45, or 75% 45 Use the Graphic Organizer to gather the data. Example: Bounce # - height Return Height Percent return Initial height 45cm 36 cm 75 1 – 36 cm 30 cm 83 2 – 30 cm 24 cm 80 3 – 24 cm 16 cm 67 4 – 16 cm 10 cm 63 Find the average percent return. Average = 73.6</p>

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