5. A standard science experiment is to drop a ball and see how high it bounces. Once the
"bounciness" of the ball has been determined, the ratio gives a bounciness index. For
example, if a ball dropped from a height of 10 feet bounces 6 feet high, the index is 0.6, and
the total distance traveled by the ball is 16 feet after one bounce. If the ball were to
continue bouncing, the distance after two bounces would be 10 ft+ 6 ft+ 6 ft + 3.6 ft=25.6
ft. Note that the distance traveled for each successive bounce is the distance to the floor
plus 0.6 of that distance as the ball comes back up. Write a program that lets the user enter
the initial height from which the ball is dropped and the number of times the ball is allowed
to continue bouncing. Output should be the total distance travelled by the ball. (2 Marks)
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