For a), you're looking at the point where x is a maximum.
The second derivative is -6, showing the that x has a maximum. The maximum is at the point where the derivative = 0, ie. where 15-6t=0
At the point t=15/6, the ball is 18.75m up the slope.
b) With the current formula of distance, you're looking at the ball going up the slope, so when you differentiate the velocity will be negative, as the ball is travelling down the slope, not up.
You need to first find the time t when it reaches the bottom of the slope. 15t-3t^2 = 3t(5-t) , so it will reach the bottom of the slope at t=5s. Subbing into the derivative 15-6t, the ball is travelling 15m/s down the slope.
c) I may be wrong for this one as the wording is a bit weird. I assume that the whole motion means the time it takes to go all the way up and all the way down. That's just 5s as I figured it part b)
Hope this helps!
