What Does Archery Have To Do With Math?
hayseboi2823 asked:
My Mom Wants Me To Do A Project For Math And Since She Went To My Class On Open House Early She Went To Life Skills, And I Checked On The School Website And Life Skills Has Something Similar To The Project. AND I DON’T WANT ANSWERS LIKE “NOTHING”, OR “SOMETHING”!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Email Quick My Mom Wants This Done By Tommorrow.
My Mom Wants Me To Do A Project For Math And Since She Went To My Class On Open House Early She Went To Life Skills, And I Checked On The School Website And Life Skills Has Something Similar To The Project. AND I DON’T WANT ANSWERS LIKE “NOTHING”, OR “SOMETHING”!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Email Quick My Mom Wants This Done By Tommorrow.

Chris P posted: 04 Nov at 4:17 pm
Archery involves the following, angle, speed, distance, and weight even. Math is involved becasue you have to shoot at a certain angle with a certain amount of speed (pulling the arrow back more or less) and calcualting the weight of the arrow, will also determine how far it will go.
missrmartin posted: 07 Nov at 9:00 am
It has the same thing to do with math as quarterbacking. You can make a hurled object travel a further distance by throwing it up at an angle so that it will continue to gain distance while traveling downward. That’s why quarterbacks angle long passes like Hail Marys’ up as opposed to throwing them straight across. The same would apply for archery. You’d be able to cause your arrow to go further with less effort. Math comes in because you need to know what angle and amount of force your shot needs in order to hit your desired target.
Jim K posted: 10 Nov at 3:48 pm
It’s basic geometry, but why do you capitalize every word? It’s bad grammar and hard to read.
DJ Serious Bizness posted: 11 Nov at 3:05 am
Archery demonstrates math and science on many levels. Trajectory, meaning the path and speed the arrow takes when it’s flying, Wind resistance, air speed, tensile strength of the bow, and target distance are just some things it involves or a project could be done about.
ROBERT P posted: 14 Nov at 12:47 am
you can figure how fast and how far the arrow travles by volosity by multipling the distance divided by feet