I attached the sketch of this problem.
One thing that we can notice right away is that:

The second thing we can notice is that:

This is basic trigonometry. You can always think of cosine as a projection on the x-axis and sine as the projection on the y-axis. From these two equations, we can find c_1 or c_2 and find the height.

Now to find the height we use the first equation:
