The more we study trigonometric applications, the more we discover that the applications are countless. Some are flat, diagram-type situations, but many applications in calculus, engineering, and physics involve three dimensions and motion.
Finding an altitude
Find the altitude of the aircraft in the problem introduced at the beginning of this section, shown in
[link] . Round the altitude to the nearest tenth of a mile.
To find the elevation of the aircraft, we first find the distance from one station to the aircraft, such as the side
and then use right triangle relationships to find the height of the aircraft,
Because the angles in the triangle add up to 180 degrees, the unknown angle must be 180°−15°−35°=130°. This angle is opposite the side of length 20, allowing us to set up a Law of Sines relationship.
The distance from one station to the aircraft is about 14.98 miles.
Now that we know
we can use right triangle relationships to solve for
The aircraft is at an altitude of approximately 3.9 miles.
The diagram shown in
[link] represents the height of a blimp flying over a football stadium. Find the height of the blimp if the angle of elevation at the southern end zone, point A, is 70°, the angle of elevation from the northern end zone, point
is 62°, and the distance between the viewing points of the two end zones is 145 yards.
The Law of Sines can be used to solve oblique triangles, which are non-right triangles.
According to the Law of Sines, the ratio of the measurement of one of the angles to the length of its opposite side equals the other two ratios of angle measure to opposite side.
There are three possible cases: ASA, AAS, SSA. Depending on the information given, we can choose the appropriate equation to find the requested solution. See
[link] .
The ambiguous case arises when an oblique triangle can have different outcomes.
There are three possible cases that arise from SSA arrangement—a single solution, two possible solutions, and no solution. See
[link] and
[link] .
The Law of Sines can be used to solve triangles with given criteria. See
[link] .
The general area formula for triangles translates to oblique triangles by first finding the appropriate height value. See
[link] .
There are many trigonometric applications. They can often be solved by first drawing a diagram of the given information and then using the appropriate equation. See
[link] .
Questions & Answers
explain the basic method of power of power rule under indices.
t he silly nut company makes two mixtures of nuts: mixture a and mixture b. a pound of mixture a contains 12 oz of peanuts, 3 oz of almonds and 1 oz of cashews and sells for $4. a pound of mixture b contains 12 oz of peanuts, 2 oz of almonds and 2 oz of cashews and sells for $5. the company has 1080
Lairene and Mae are joking that their combined ages equal Sam’s age. If Lairene is twice Mae’s age and Sam is 69 yrs old, what are Lairene’s and Mae’s ages?