A person jumps from a window 57 meters high and is caught in a firefighter's net which stretches 0.6 meter. To the nearest tenth of a m/s^2, what is the magnitude of the person's acceleration in the net?

mgh=f*d=mad

solve for a

Bobpursley, if you could, would be able to elaborate on what you mean by "mgh=f*d=mad"

I am new to physics and I have pretty much this same exact problem for my homework and I can't figure it out on my own. I have searched the book and nothing that is in the book that has been covered thus far seems to click as for how I can solve this problem.

To find the magnitude of the person's acceleration in the net, we can use the following equation of motion:

v^2 = u^2 + 2 * a * s

Where:
v = final velocity (0 m/s, as the person comes to a stop)
u = initial velocity (unknown)
a = acceleration (what we need to find)
s = displacement (57 m + 0.6 m = 57.6 m)

Since the person jumps from a window, there is no initial vertical velocity (u = 0 m/s), so we can simplify the equation to:

v^2 = 2 * a * s

Substituting the given values:

(0 m/s)^2 = 2 * a * 57.6 m

0 = 2 * a * 57.6 m

Now, let's solve for a:

2 * a * 57.6 m = 0

a * 57.6 m = 0

a = 0 / 57.6 m

a = 0 m/s^2

Therefore, the magnitude of the person's acceleration in the net is 0 m/s^2.