What must the third displacement be?

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The discussion centers on calculating the third displacement needed for a delivery man to reach his destination after traveling specific distances in different directions. The first leg of the journey is 35 miles northwest, followed by 60 miles at 35° west of south, with the final destination being 100 miles west of the starting point. The user struggles with applying trigonometric principles, specifically SOHCAHTOA, and the Pythagorean theorem to determine the magnitude and direction of the third displacement. There is confusion regarding the angles involved, particularly in relation to the triangle formed by the points of travel. Ultimately, a more accurate graph reveals that the final position is further west than initially thought, indicating a need for careful recalculation of angles and distances.
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Homework Statement



A delivery man travels 35 mi northwest to his first stop, 60 mi in a direction 35° west of south to his second stop. His third stop is supposed to be 100 mi west of his original position. What must his third displacement be (magnitude and direction) for him to reach his destination?

Homework Equations



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The Attempt at a Solution



I drew this inaccurate graph.

i41w1y.png


I'd rather not make an accurate graph for these kind of problems since I don't always have the resources to do so. I'm familiar with SOHCAHTOA, but I'm not sure how to use it to find the solution to this problem.

This is what someone suggested for a similar problem, but I'm having trouble understanding it.

Now, to your question:
- Displacement: 3.5km north, 5km west and 1.7km south gives a net distance of
√[(3.5 - 1.7)² + 5²] (Pythagorean theorem) = √28.24
to the direction of north-west (not exactly northwest)
- Direction: This is more trigonometric than geometric but whatever.
Let α be the angle between "East" axis and the direction of movement, we have:
tanα = y/x = (3.5 - 1.7)/5 = 0.36 => α = arctan(0.36)
 
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Let the starting point be O. the firsat stop be A, second stop be B and third stop be C.
In triangle OAC, OA, OC and angle AOC is given.Using cosine rule you can find AC, and usind sine rule you can find angle OAC. Repeat the same thing for the triangle CAB.
 
That does make things easier to understand, but I'm not even certain that I calculated the angles correctly since my graph is inaccurate.

Once I do find the angles for triangle OAC, how will that help me find the angles for CAB?
 
Angle OAB is known.
CAB = OAB - OAC.
 
Is angle OAB 80 degrees? I tried redrawing the graph on paper, and now I don't think it is.
 
35 degrees west of south means 55 degrees south of west.
So 55 + 45 + θ = 180 degrees.
 
Oh, okay.

Also, when I redrew the graph more accurately, point C actually turned up being positioned more west than point B.
 
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