Use the function V(T) = 18T2. A basketball player has a vertical leap of 38.5 inches.

What is their hang time to the nearest hundredth of a second?

Hint: T is your time in seconds.

If V = 18 T^2 ,

with V (the vertical height) in inches and T in seconds, then
T = sqrt(V/18)

If V = 38.5 inches, then
T = sqrt(38.5/18) = 1.463 seconds

"sqrt" means "square root of"

Thank you so much for helping me.I appreciate it

I must admit that I am caught totally unaware of the recent change in the law of gravity.

I think drwls did not see the inches unit.

I thought it was
height = 16t^2 , where height is in feet
so 38.5 = 38.5/12 ft = 3.208 ft
3.208 = 16t^2
t = .2005
t = √.2005 = .448 seconds to go up

so hang time = 2(.448) or appr 0.9 seconds

(Michael Jordan was timed at a 1 second hangtime, I looked it up)

To find the hang time of the basketball player, we need to solve the equation V(T) = 18T^2 for T.

Here, V(T) represents the vertical velocity at time T, and 18T^2 represents the given function.

Given that the basketball player has a vertical leap of 38.5 inches, we can rewrite the equation as:

38.5 = 18T^2

To solve for T, we need to isolate T^2. Divide both sides of the equation by 18:

38.5/18 = T^2

Simplifying the equation:

2.14 ≈ T^2

To find T, we need to take the square root of both sides of the equation. However, we must be careful here because the equation has two possible answers: the positive square root and the negative square root.

Taking the square root of both sides, we have:

T = ±√2.14

Since time cannot be negative in this context, we can discard the negative square root. Therefore:

T ≈ √2.14

Using a calculator, we can find the approximate value of √2.14:

T ≈ 1.46

Therefore, the hang time, rounded to the nearest hundredth of a second, is approximately 1.46 seconds.