Calculating Distance Traveled on a Winding Trajectory From North to South Pole

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the distance traveled by an airplane flying from the North Pole to the South Pole along a winding trajectory, described using spherical coordinates. The trajectory is constrained to a sphere of radius R, with the airplane maintaining a constant velocity in the vertical direction while winding around the Earth.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the use of spherical coordinates to describe the trajectory, with one noting the need to express the integral in a specific form. There are questions about the bounds of integration and how to manipulate the integral to match the required format.

Discussion Status

Some participants have made progress in converting the problem into spherical coordinates and identifying integration bounds. However, there remains uncertainty about how to express the integral correctly, and no consensus has been reached on the approach to take.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of a need to change the parameterization from time t to the angle θ in spherical coordinates, indicating a potential complexity in the problem setup. Participants express confusion regarding the problem's requirements and the integration process.

kitsh
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Homework Statement


An airplane flies from the North Pole to the South Pole, following a winding trajectory. Place the center of the Earth at the origin of your coordinate system, and align the south-to-north axis of the Earth with your z axis. The pilot’s trajectory can then be described as follows:
1) The plane’s trajectory is confined to a sphere of radius R centered on the origin.
2) The pilot maintains a constant velocity v in the -z direction, thus the z coordinate can be described as z(t)=R-vt
3) The pilot "winds" around the Earth as she travels south, covering a constant ω radians per second in the azimuthal angle ϕ, thus ϕ(t)=ωt

Calculate the total distance traveled by the pilot. What you will find is that time t is not the best IP with which to parametrize this path. You can start with it, certainly … but then get rid of it in terms of a different choice for your IP: θ, from spherical coordinates

Homework Equations


Spherical coordinates are (r, θ, ϕ)
The Answer should be in the form of ∫A√(1+B^2(sin(θ))^n)dθ where A, B and n are either numerical constants or constants in in the terms of R, v and ω

The Attempt at a Solution


I honestly have no idea how I am supposed to approach this question, it is nothing like anything I have seen in this class or any other
 
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I would start with spherical coordinates. With constant radius, R, x= R cos(\theta)sin(\phi), y= R sin(\theta)sin(\phi), z= R cos(phi). Here we have z= R cos(\phi)= R- vt and \phi= \omega t[/te]x] so z= R cos(\omega t)= R- vt
 
So I converted everything to spherical which helps some and I know the bounds of integration are going to be from 0 to pi and that the integration constant is rdθ but I still can't figure out how to get the integral into the form indicated above.
 
kitsh said:
So I converted everything to spherical which helps some and I know the bounds of integration are going to be from 0 to pi and that the integration constant is rdθ but I still can't figure out how to get the integral into the form indicated above.
Please post your working as far as you get.
 

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