Finding Initial Angle for a Projectile to Hit a Target 10,000 ft Away

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Marcin H
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Homework Statement

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Find two elevation angles that will enable a shell, fired from

ground level with a muzzle speed of 800 ft/s, to hit a groundlevel

target 10,000 ft away.

Homework Equations


Look at attached picture

The Attempt at a Solution


Look at attached picture

***I get to cos(x)sin(x)=1/4, but I don't think you can solve that for an angle x...
 

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***UPDATE***

I got one of the angles, and it checks out with the answer key, but how on Earth do I get the angle of 15?

MY WORK:
New Doc 2Page 1.jpg

ANSWER KEY:
ANSWER KEY.png
 
Marcin H said:
***UPDATE***

I got one of the angles, and it checks out with the answer key, but how on Earth do I get the angle of 15?

MY WORK:
View attachment 89769
ANSWER KEY:
View attachment 89770
You have a mistake in your work. As best as I can tell, your answer is close only due to a coincidence.

One of your equations is ##50\sin(\theta) = t## and the other is ##800 \cos(\theta)t = 10000##
Your mistake is in solving for ##\sin(\theta)## in the first equation. It should be ##\sin(\theta) = \frac t {50}##.

BTW, please make an effort to post your work here, rather than as an image. Your work is somewhat difficult to read.
 
S=ut-½at2. (1)
R=vt. (2)

Just eliminate t, and substitute data in the last equation.