Two trig questions (Triangles and Trapezoid)

  • Thread starter Thread starter rought
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Trapezoid Trig
AI Thread Summary
An isosceles trapezoid with a height of 4 cm and bases of 3 cm and 7 cm requires calculating the lengths of its diagonals. To start, drawing the trapezoid on a coordinate system helps in determining the coordinates of its vertices. The distance between opposite vertices can be calculated using the Pythagorean theorem, with one leg being the height and the other leg being the difference in base lengths. For the second question involving the ship sighted from two lighthouses, drawing a triangle and applying the Law of Sines is essential to find the distance to the nearer lighthouse. The discussion emphasizes the importance of visual representation and proper application of trigonometric principles in solving these problems.
rought
Messages
34
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



An isosceles trapezoid has a height of 4 cm and bases 3 cm and 7 cm long. How long are its diagonals?


From lighthouses P and Q, 16km apart, a disabled ship S is sighted. If angle SPQ = 44 and angle SQP = 66, find the distance from S to the nearer lighthouse?



I know how to do all of the calculations but I am just not sure where to start on these =/ ?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Well, you need to show some work or at least show your thoughts on how to proceed. What have you done so far?

Hint/question: What is nice about the trapezoid being isosceles?
 
For #1, draw a picture of the trapezoid on a coordinate axis system. I would center the long base on the x axis. Find the coordinates of the four vertices and calculate the distance from the opposite vertices. They should be equal.

For #2, draw a picture of the triangle formed by the two lighthouses and the ship, and label the vertices as P, Q, and S (the ship). Label the side you know and the angles you know. From the given information, use what you know about trig to find the missing side. You'll probably need to use the Law of Sines.
 
Alright well I am good with the second question on the ship i am pretty sure i got it...

For the trapezoid here's what I drew

2dj9ugg.png


I'm not sure where to go from here
 
Look a bit closer at what I said earlier:
For #1, draw a picture of the trapezoid on a coordinate axis system. I would center the long base on the x axis. Find the coordinates of the four vertices and calculate the distance from the opposite vertices. They should be equal.
 
Alright I graphed it out, with (0,0) and (0,7) being the two bottom vertices, and (2,4) and (5,4) for the others... would the distance be 4? Between one of the long vertices and one of the short?
 
Just use the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the diagonal (which would be the hypotenuse). You already know the height, and you can easily find out the other cathetus (you more or less already have it since you wrote out coordinates).
 
ahh ok, √5² + 4² = √41 ≈ 6.403 that seem right?
 
rought said:
ahh ok, √5² + 4² = √41 ≈ 6.403 that seem right?
Correct.
 
  • #10
Why 5? The right triangle with the lower right corner as one vertex and the diagonal as hypotenuse has height 4 cm, the height of the parallelogram, and base 7- 3= 4 cm.
 
  • #11
HallsofIvy said:
Why 5? The right triangle with the lower right corner as one vertex and the diagonal as hypotenuse has height 4 cm, the height of the parallelogram, and base 7- 3= 4 cm.
No, the base is 7-2=5 cm.
 

Attachments

  • isosceles_trapezoid.jpg
    isosceles_trapezoid.jpg
    6.4 KB · Views: 763
Back
Top