Calculating Hawk's Shadow Speed

  • Thread starter Thread starter niyati
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Shadow Speed
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the speed of a hawk's shadow as it dives at a constant velocity of 5.00 m/s at a 60-degree angle below the horizontal. Participants clarify that the shadow's speed can be determined using the horizontal component of the hawk's velocity, which can be calculated using trigonometric functions. The calculations confirm that the shadow moves at 2.5 m/s, whether approached through the cosine of 300 degrees or by visualizing a 30-60-90 triangle. Additionally, there is a request for clarification on the visual representation of the scenario, particularly regarding the shadow's position relative to the hawk's dive. The conversation emphasizes understanding the geometry involved in the problem.
niyati
Messages
63
Reaction score
0
3. When the Sun is directly overhead, a hawk dives toward the ground with a constant velocity of 5.00 m/s at 60.0 degrees below the horizontal. Calculate the speed of her shadow on the level ground.

I am having some trouble picturing this problem in terms of a coordinate grid (this is in a chapter dealing with motion in two dimensions). I'm basically making a triangle, and I know (or at least I'm hoping) that the shadow is the horizontal component of the vector that is the hawk's flight. If it's 60 degrees below the "horizontal" or, the way I see it, the "line of sight", the direction is equivalent to 300 degrees if making an imaginary coordinate grid at the point before she descends, making the h.c. = 5.00cos300. Or, actually, the entire thing is a 30-60-90 triangle, so the velocity of her shadow is 2.5 m/s.

...is that right? Or, rather, is my long-winded train of thought correct?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Your answer is correct. Good Job!

You should get the same answer if you did the problem with the cosine of 300 degrees or with the 30-60-90 triangle. Both descriptions of the situation can accurately be used to find the answer.

Also, your thinking, as far as I understand it, is correct. 60 degrees below the horizontal in the can be described by an angle of 300 degrees. Was this all you were asking or is there more to your train of thought that you were unsure about?
 
Last edited:
Yes you are right
 
Thank you! :DDD

That was all I was wondering.
 
Yep, yep!

Thanks a bunch! =]
 
ok can someone please explain how the picture looks for this question!
i don't understand the picture since it says the hawk is diving down under the horizontal
so where is the shadow?
help please
 
Thread 'Voltmeter readings for this circuit with switches'
TL;DR Summary: I would like to know the voltmeter readings on the two resistors separately in the picture in the following cases , When one of the keys is closed When both of them are opened (Knowing that the battery has negligible internal resistance) My thoughts for the first case , one of them must be 12 volt while the other is 0 The second case we'll I think both voltmeter readings should be 12 volt since they are both parallel to the battery and they involve the key within what the...
Thread 'Correct statement about a reservoir with an outlet pipe'
The answer to this question is statements (ii) and (iv) are correct. (i) This is FALSE because the speed of water in the tap is greater than speed at the water surface (ii) I don't even understand this statement. What does the "seal" part have to do with water flowing out? Won't the water still flow out through the tap until the tank is empty whether the reservoir is sealed or not? (iii) In my opinion, this statement would be correct. Increasing the gravitational potential energy of the...
Back
Top