What is the height of the aeroplane at the moment the package was released?

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The discussion focuses on calculating the height of an airplane at the moment a package is released while climbing at a 2-degree angle and traveling at 400 m/s. The initial velocity of the package matches that of the plane, and the horizontal distance traveled before impact is 2500 m. Participants clarify the use of trigonometric functions for horizontal and vertical components, emphasizing that the correct expressions are Vx = 400cos(2) and Vy = 400sin(2). A misunderstanding arises regarding the application of sine and cosine, with corrections made to ensure accurate calculations. The thread highlights the importance of correctly separating the x and y components of motion to derive the correct height.
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An aeroplane is climbing at an angle of 2 degrees while maintaining a speed of 400ms^-1. A package is released and travels a horizontal distance of 2500m before hitting the ground. The initial velocity of the package is the same as the initial velocity as the plane, find the height of the aeroplane above the ground at the moment the package was released.

I did some calculations but my answer is apparently wrong.

Considering motion in the vertical plane.
a= 9.8
s=?
u=400sin88
t=?

To find t i used the horizontal plane and got 6.25 sec.

therefore s = ut + 05.at^2
(400sin88 x 6.25) + 0.5x9,8x6.25^2
=2700M

Where did I go wrong?
 
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You've mixed the x and y directions.
u_y \ne 400 \sin 88^o
 
Päällikkö said:
You've mixed the x and y directions.
u_y \ne 400 \sin 88^o


Can you explain please? I thought the x direction was 400cos2 and y direction was 400sin88?
 
"climbing at an angle of 2 degrees" means 2 degrees from the horizontal.
Draw a diagram, and you'll see that cos is used for the x-direction.

sin gets its maximum at 90 degrees while cos reaches it at 0. ~400 m/s vertically and ~0m/s horizontally is a steep climb for an aeroplane.
Oh, and cos 2o = sin 88o
 
Yes, so the x direction is 400cos2, and y direction is 400sin88?
 
No.
That would mean vx = vy, which is certainly not the case here. That'd mean the elevation was 45 degrees.

For simplicity, use the same angle to express the velocities.
 
Oh right!. So Vx=400cos2 and Vy=400cos88.
 
Correct, although I would've used 400cos2 and 400sin2.
 
Yes, that true.
 
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