Calculating Displacement Vectors: Solving Problems in St. Louis and at Sea

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around solving physics problems related to displacement vectors. One problem involves calculating the distance from a driver to the Gateway Arch in St. Louis using trigonometry, specifically the tangent function, given the height of the arch and the angle of sight. Another problem requires determining the eastward and northward components of an ocean liner's displacement vector after traveling at an angle. Participants emphasize the importance of visualizing the problems with diagrams and confirm that the scenarios can be treated as right triangles for calculations. The conversation highlights the application of basic trigonometric functions to solve these displacement problems.
taylor89
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
Hi, I am new here and I am taking Ap Physic I have some problems and I can't figure them out I posted them below. Any help would be appriciated...:smile:

You are driving into St. Louis, Missouri, and in the distance you see the famous Gateway-to-the-West arch. This monument rises to a height of 192 m. You estimate your line of sight with the top of the arch to be 7.8° above the horizontal. Approximately how far (in kilometers) are you from the base of the arch?_____km

An ocean liner leaves New York City and travels 47.0° north of east for 218 km. How far east and how far north has it gone? In other words, what are the magnitudes of the components of the ship's displacement vector in the following directions?
(a) due east ______km
(b) due north______km
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi, Tarylor. Welcome the forum.
You have to show us what you have done before asking for help. Both the answers require nothing more than simple trigonometry.
 
I don't really know how to show you what I've done cause it is a drawing I just need instructions on how to solve
 
For the first, use the definition of the tangent of an angle. The second requires to use the sine and cosine functions.
 
K

K I got this one can you help me with this one.

You are driving into St. Louis, Missouri, and in the distance you see the famous Gateway-to-the-West arch. This monument rises to a height of 192 m. You estimate your line of sight with the top of the arch to be 7.8° above the horizontal. Approximately how far (in kilometers) are you from the base of the arch? _______km
 
I assume that you have drawn the appropriate diagram for this problem. Do you know that the ratio between the height of the monument and your distance to it is?
 
actually i was unsure if this looked like a right triangle or if it had an arc
 
For problems such as these, you can safely assume that it's a right triangle, unless otherwise mentioned, of course.
 
You can now use the tangent of the angle above the horizontal to calculate the required distance. I've checked in the internet and the arc's height is 630 feet.
 
  • #10
Btw, the height of the arch is 192 metres, not Km.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top