Car Speed: Find the Answer Here

  • Thread starter Thread starter mathman100
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Car Speed
Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a problem involving a plane flying at a height of 2 km and a car approaching it, with the distance between them decreasing. The context includes concepts from related rates and the Pythagorean theorem, as participants attempt to determine the speed of the car based on given rates of change.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between the height of the plane and the horizontal distance to the car, questioning whether the 4 km distance is horizontal or the actual distance. Some attempt to apply related rates and the Pythagorean theorem to find the car's speed.

Discussion Status

Several participants have shared their calculations and reasoning, with some expressing confusion about the application of the plane's speed and the interpretation of the distances involved. There is an ongoing exploration of different approaches, with no clear consensus reached yet.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the need to differentiate the Pythagorean theorem and consider the effects of both the plane's and car's speeds on the horizontal distance. There is uncertainty about whether all necessary information is available to solve the problem accurately.

mathman100
Messages
15
Reaction score
0
A plane 2km high is flying at rate of 120 km/h due west and sees an oncoming car. The distance between them is 4km and is decresing at rate of 160 km/h. Find the speed of the car at this moment...
I can't solve this! i guess the 4km is horizontal diatnce or else the plane and car would crash...
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The fact that you are given the height of the plane suggests that 4km is the actual distance between the object and you will need to use pythag to calculate the linear distance. Show some of your working and I'll see if I can give you some hints.
 
ok, here is what i thought, i used related rates:
triangle with sides a (height of plane=2), b (sqrt12, found by pythag.theorem) and side c (hypotenuse, =4 km, ditsance from car-plane)
c'=(sqrt12*120)/4
=104
then to find theta
sintheta=2/4, theta = 30 degrees
104sin(30)=b'
51 km/h=b
160-51=109 -- I expected the answer to be 40 km/h, because i thought 4km was the horizonatl distance, so 160-20...
 
mathman100 said:
ok, here is what i thought, i used related rates:
triangle with sides a (height of plane=2), b (sqrt12, found by pythag.theorem) and side c (hypotenuse, =4 km, ditsance from car-plane)
c'=(sqrt12*120)/4
=104
then to find theta
sintheta=2/4, theta = 30 degrees
104sin(30)=b'
51 km/h=b
160-51=109 -- I expected the answer to be 40 km/h, because i thought 4km was the horizonatl distance, so 160-20...
Your c' is not close to being correct.

Symbolically, if y is the hypotenuse and x is the horizontal component, then:

[tex]y=\sqrt{2^2+x^2}[/tex]

Differentiate to find dy. Then substitute in the values you know. You know dy=-160. You know x = [tex]\sqrt{12}[/tex]
The only unknown is dx.

Keep in mind that dx has two things affecting it: the speed of the plane and the speed of the car.
 
i'm not sure i understand- do i have enough information to sove if i know thta:
a=2, da/dt=0
b=sqrt12, db/dt=?
c=4, dc/dt= -160km/h
then where do i use the speed of plane=120km?
 
mathman100 said:
i'm not sure i understand- do i have enough information to sove if i know thta:
a=2, da/dt=0
b=sqrt12, db/dt=?
c=4, dc/dt= -160km/h
Have you differentiated your equation for the Pythagorean Theorem yet? Try doing that (you have to use the Chain Rule, which is what eventually results in a dx showing up in your equation).

then where do i use the speed of plane=120km?
Keep in mind that dx has two things affecting it: the speed of the plane and the speed of the car.
 
Last edited:
Here's what i have:
triangle xyz where x=sqrt12 (by using pyth.theorem), y=2, and z=4.
dx/dt=? , dy/dt=0 , dz/dt=-160?
x^2+y^2=z^2
x(dx/dt)+y(dy/dt)=z(dz/dt)
since dy/dt=0:
x(dx/dt)=z(dz/dt) *** This is where i get stuck again- i want dx/dt, but where do i put in the speed of the plane, 120km/h?
If i just did it as is, then:
sqrt12(dx/dt)=4(-160)
dx/dt=-640/sqrt12
=about-184.8, which i can tell isn't right... What do i do??
 
I don't think the elevation difference matters, and that this is a simple relative velocity problem.

Vplane =Vcar + Vp/c

120 = Vc + 160

So Vc = -40, i.e. the car is going 40km/h east

I think..
 
that's what i thought at first too, but i tried doing it the other way, and using that 185, you take away the speed of the plane (-120), so 185-120 =65km/hr--- the speed of the car i guess?
 
  • #10
160 Km/h is the speed at which the distance between the car and the plane (y) is decreasing, not the horizontal distance x.

[tex]y^2 = x^2 + z^2[/tex]

diff. we get 2y(dy/dt) = 2x(dx/dt) + 0

dy/dt is the rate at which y changes (160 Km/h) and dx/dt is the rate at which the horizontal distance x changes (120 + v).

M.P.
 
  • #11
thanks everyone for your help, you're awesome!
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 29 ·
Replies
29
Views
4K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
4K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
3K
Replies
27
Views
3K