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A tennis ball is dropped from an initial height of 30 feet. It bounces 5 times, with each bounce height being about 2/3 of the height of the previous bounce.

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Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

I'm thinking you want to know the height of the ball on that 5th bounce, right? This is of the form

[tex]y=a(b)^x[/tex]

where a is the initial height and b is the decay factor.  If the ball comes up to 2/3 of its height from the previous bounce, then b = 2/3 and our equation is

[tex]y=30(\frac{2}{3})^x[/tex]

If you want to know the height y of the 5th bounce x, sub in a 5 for x and solve for y:

[tex]y=30(\frac{2}{3})^5[/tex] and get that

y = 320/81 or as a decimal, 3.9506 feet