Bouncing ball rises a fraction of its fall
A ball bounces back up to of the height it falls from. If this ball is dropped from a height of , what is the total distance the ball travels up to the moment it bounces up for the second time, in meters?
Show solution
Understand
A ball is dropped from 150 m. Each bounce sends it back up to 2/5 of the height it just fell. I need the total distance the ball travels (down plus up) from the start until the instant it reaches the top of its second upward bounce.
- The ball rebounds to 2/5 of the height it falls from.
- It is dropped from a height of 150 m.
- We follow the motion until it bounces up for the second time.
- The total distance traveled (in meters) up to the moment of the second upward bounce.
- Distance is the sum of every fall and every rise, all counted as positive lengths.
- Up to the second bounce-up the path is: first fall, first rise, second fall, second rise.
Plan
#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
Sketching the up-and-down path makes clear exactly which legs to add. Each rebound height is a fraction-of-a-number subproblem (divide by 5, multiply by 2), and the answer is the sum of the four legs.
Execute
Review
Each bounce is smaller than the last (150, 60, 24), which fits a ball losing height. The total 294 m is a bit under twice the drop height, sensible since the ball goes down 150, then makes two shorter up-down trips. Units stay in meters throughout.
Look for a pattern (tool 5): rebound heights shrink by the factor 2/5 each time (150, 60, 24...). Listing fall and rise legs up to the second bounce and summing gives the same 294 m.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Finding 2/5 of each fall height by splitting into 5 equal parts and taking 2 of them.3.OA.A.2Interpret whole-number quotients of whole numbers — Dividing heights by 5 and adding the four legs of the path.