How Do You Calculate the Deviation of an Airplane's Course Due to Wind?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the deviation of an airplane's course due to wind. The original poster presents a scenario where an airplane is flying north while being affected by a southwest wind, leading to questions about the resultant velocity and the distance off course after a specified time.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss vector decomposition and the geometry of the situation, including drawing triangles to visualize the problem. There are differing interpretations of how to calculate the distance off course, with some suggesting the use of right triangles and others questioning the definitions of "off course."

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of the problem with various interpretations being discussed. Some participants have provided calculations and reasoning, while others express confusion about the results and the definitions used in the problem. No consensus has been reached regarding the correct distance off course.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the constraints of homework rules, which may limit the information they can share or the methods they can use. There is also a mention of discrepancies between personal calculations and answer key results, indicating potential misunderstandings of the problem requirements.

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An airplane is heading due north at a speed of 300km/h. If a wind begins blowing from the southwest at a speed of 50km/h(average), calculate (a) the velocity (magnitude and direction) of the plane, and (b) how far off course it will be in 30 min.

Ok, I solved a) 337km/h 6 degrees E of N.
But I dont' understand how to solve part b.
Anyone want to help?
 
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The plane intended to be moving due north at 300 km/hr, so it should be 150 km due north after 30 minutes.

The wind blew it off-course, however, and it actually moved 337/2 km, six degrees east of north.

Draw a triangle, one leg pointing due north with length 150, another leg pointing six degrees east of north with length 337/2 (168.5), then solve for the length of the third leg. The length of the third leg is the distance between the plane's intended and actual positions after 30 minutes.

- Warren
 
i got 24.8km but the answer sheet says 17.6km. :frown:
 
It depends on what you mean by "how far off course". If you think about it, at the end of half an hour the plane will be 25 kilometers due northeast of where it should be. This is the result of the 300 kph of the plane's still-air speed plus the 50 kph due northeast from the wind. Clearly, the only thing moving the plane off course is the wind.

If you decompose the vectors, you have an isosceles right triangle with hypotenuse 25 km, making the legs 17.6 km. So, one could argue that it's only 17.6 km east of where it should be, and 17.6 km north of where it should be.
 
Okay, guys I need help on another question.

An automobile traveling 90km/h, overtakes a 1.0km train traveling the same direction on a track parallel to the road. If the train's speed is 60km/h, how long does it take the car to pass it and how far will it have traveled in this time? What are the results if the car and train are traveling in opposite directions?

Same Direction: t=.033hours d=3 km
Opposite Direction t=.0067 hour d=.6 km

I don't understand why my distances are wrong. My times are correct though.
The answers are d=2km for same direction and d=.4km for opposite direction.

Can anyone explain this to me?
 
Displaying how you derived your results would be much more helpfull than telling "I got x=y" because it would save us the time to guess what you did.

However: In this case I think you calculated out how far the car traveled while the question was supposed to be how far the train travels (doesn´t seem obvious to me what´s asked for - as in your 1st question). Hence the factor 60/90 = 2/3 difference between your results and the book´s.

btw.: Your book (or teacher - whoever gave you the questions) suxx.
 

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