When a rocket is 4 kilometers high, it is moving vertically upward at a speed of 400 kilometers per hour. At that instant, how fast is the angle of elevation of the rocket increasing, as seen by an observer on the ground 5 kilometers from the launching pad

Respuesta :

Answer:

The angle of elevation of the rocket is increasing at a rate of 48.780º per second.

Explanation:

Geometrically speaking, the distance between the rocket and the observer ([tex]r[/tex]), measured in kilometers, can be represented by a right triangle:

[tex]r = \sqrt{x^{2}+y^{2}}[/tex] (1)

Where:

[tex]x[/tex] - Horizontal distance between the rocket and the observer, measured in kilometers.

[tex]y[/tex] - Vertical distance between the rocket and the observer, measured in kilometers.

The angle of elevation of the rocket ([tex]\theta[/tex]), measured in sexagesimal degrees, is defined by the following trigonometric relation:

[tex]\tan \theta = \frac{y}{x}[/tex] (2)

If we know that [tex]x = 5\,km[/tex], then the expression is:

[tex]\tan \theta = \frac{y}{5}[/tex]

And the rate of change of this angle is determined by derivatives:

[tex]\sec^{2}\theta \cdot \dot \theta = \frac{1}{5}\cdot \dot y[/tex]

[tex]\frac{\dot \theta}{\cos^{2}\theta} = \frac{\dot y}{5}[/tex]

[tex]\frac{\dot \theta\cdot (25+y^{2})}{25} = \frac{\dot y}{5}[/tex]

[tex]\dot \theta = \frac{5\cdot \dot y}{25+y^{2}}[/tex]

Where:

[tex]\dot \theta[/tex] - Rate of change of the angle of elevation, measured in sexagesimal degrees.

[tex]\dot y[/tex] - Vertical speed of the rocket, measured in kilometers per hour.

If we know that [tex]y = 4\,km[/tex] and [tex]\dot y = 400\,\frac{km}{h}[/tex], then the rate of change of the angle of elevation is:

[tex]\dot \theta = 48.780\,\frac{\circ}{s}[/tex]

The angle of elevation of the rocket is increasing at a rate of 48.780º per second.