When should a coastguard cutter start out to intercept a ship?

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A coastguard cutter must start its intercept before a ship passes a point located a distance D√(v² - u²)/u back along the coast to successfully intercept it. The cutter's speed (u) is less than the ship's speed (v), requiring strategic timing for departure. The discussion involved breaking down the cutter's velocity into components and finding the relationship between the angles and distances involved. The key to solving the problem lies in minimizing the distance x, which can be achieved through differentiation and trigonometric relationships. Ultimately, understanding these dynamics is crucial for effective interception.
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Hi, I have this question which I am having trouble with

A ship is steaming parallel to a straight coastline, distance D offshore, at speed v. A coastguard cutter, whose speed is u (u<v) seta out from port to intercept the ship. Show that the cutter must start out before the ship passes a point a distance \displaystyle{D\frac{\sqrt{v^2 - u^2}}{u}} back along the coast.

Im looking for a hint of how to go about this.

http://img27.exs.cx/img27/6558/Ships.jpgHeres a picture

Ive tried breaking the u vector into its horizontal and vertical components but that isn't getting me anywhere. Any ideas?

Thankyou
 
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Welcome to PF LondonLady!

If the cutter starts out after the ship passes the mentioned distance, the coastguard will be unable to intercept the ship. Breaking the velocity components is just one of the steps. What have you done?
 
Hi, thankyou! :smile:

Em, well first i designated the value of the distance that v starts behind u to be 'x'

So then I broke the u vector into u\cos \theta i + u\sin \theta j.

At the time of intersection 't' the two ships will be in the same place so i evaluated the x - y displacement at that time and got...

vt - x = ut\cos \theta

and

ut\sin \theta = D

I eliminated t to get

\displaystyle{x = \frac{D(u\cos \theta - v)}{u \sin \theta}}

My problem is, I don't know if this right, and if it is, how i would go about getting rid of \theta. Maybe I am missing some obvious relation involving \theta :confused:
 
That's good; now you want x to be a minimum to get that particular point so take the derivative - remember at a minimum the derivitave = 0. A little trigonometry and the angles dissappear.
 
Hello, thankyou for your reply :smile:

Ahhh!

I started with \displaystyle{x = D\frac{u\cos \theta - v}{u \sin \theta}}

and differentiated. I found that at the minimum of x

\displaystyle{\cos \theta = \frac{u}{v}}

which would mean (after drawing a triangle) that

\displaystyle{\sin \theta = \frac{\sqrt{v^2 - u^2}}{u}}}

When I plug these back in at the top I get

\displaystyle{x = D\frac{u^2 - v^2}{u\sqrt{v^2 - u^2}}}

which is wrong!

What me doing wrong?
 
I got it!

Thanks all
 
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