Calculating Boat's Movement: Rates of Change with Rope Pulling on Pier

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A man pulls a boat towards a pier using a rope, creating a right triangle with a vertical leg of 2.4m and a horizontal leg of 3.2m. The rope is pulled at a rate of 30 cm per minute, and the goal is to determine the rate at which the boat moves towards the pier. By applying the Pythagorean theorem and implicit differentiation, the relationship between the variables can be established. The differentiation leads to the equation for dy/dt, which represents the boat's movement towards the pier. Solving this equation with the given values will yield the desired rate of movement.
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A man standing on a pier pulls a small boat towards him using a rope attached to the prow. The rope is pulled from a height of 2.4m above its point of attachment to the boat. The rope is pulled at a rate of 30 cm a minute. At what rate is the boat moving towards the pier when it is 3.2m away.

Im stuck on this problem. I know it is a right angled triange, and that you have to differentiate using phythagoras, but i am stuck. help appreciated please
 
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yeah i think your going the right direction i'll just look it up for you
 
it dosn't happen to tell you the force being exerted on the rope? (in newtowns?)
 
Kingofthedamned said:
it dosn't happen to tell you the force being exerted on the rope? (in newtowns?)
no, is a maths question :smile:
 
yeah it is possible to do it by phythagorius
 
no, is a maths question :smile:

lol. Make a right triangle with legs of length 2.4 m for the vertical leg(x), and 3.2 m for the horizontal leg(y), with z as the hypotenuse or the length of the rope. Set up your equation as:

x^2 + y^2= z^2

now make all of your variables (x,y,z) a function of time, so when you implicitly differentiate the equation with respect to time, it will look like this:

2x \frac{dx}{dt} + 2y \frac{dy}{dt} = 2z \frac{dz}{dt}

now you know that dx/dt is constant, since the dude holding the rope isn't moving up and down, but is holding it steady while he pulls it in, so dx/dt cancels to zero. Just solve for dy/dt since that is the rate of change of the horizontal leg of the triangle (the rate is the boat moving towards the pier). y, z and dz/dt are all given in the problem. Plug'n solve.
 
Last edited:
Gza said:
lol. Make a right triangle with legs of length 2.4 m for the vertical leg(x), and 3.2 m for the horizontal leg(y), with z as the hypotenuse or the length of the rope. Set up your equation as:

x^2 + y^2= z^2

now make all of your variables (x,y,z) a function of time, so when you implicitly differentiate the equation with respect to time, it will look like this:

2x \frac{dx}{dt} + 2y \frac{dy}{dt} = 2z \frac{dz}{dt}

now you know that dx/dt is constant, since the dude holding the rope isn't moving up and down, but is holding it steady while he pulls it in, so dx/dt cancels to zero. Just solve for dy/dt since that is the rate of change of the horizontal leg of the triangle (the rate is the boat moving towards the pier). y, z and dz/dt are all given in the problem. Plug'n solve.
greatly appreciated, but can't get dy/dt. any help please? :frown:
 
greatly appreciated, but can't get dy/dt. any help please?

It's really just a matter of algebra now. Just get what you want on the left, and everything else on the right, and plug in what you know.

\frac{dy}{dt} = \frac{z}{y} \frac{dz}{dt}

now for z, the problem told you that you wanted the value of dy/dt, when the boat was 3.2 m away. So z is just the square root of (3.2)^2 + (2.4)^2
(Pythag). dz/dt is the rate of change of z in time, which the problem gave you as "30 cm a minute."

:smile:
 
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