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A 10-meter utility pole casts a 16-meter shadow directly down a slope when the angle of elevation of the sun is 42° (see figure). Find , the angle of elevation of the ground. (Round your answer to one decimal place.)

A 10-meter utility pole casts a 16-meter shadow directly down a slope when the angle-example-1
User Simeon Pilgrim
by
2.9k points

1 Answer

27 votes
27 votes

Solution:

Given the figure:

To find the angle θ, we have

step 1: Find angle A.

Thus, we have


\begin{gathered} \angle\text{A+}\angle B+\angle C=180(sum\text{ of angles in a triangle\rparen} \\ \Rightarrow A+42+90=180 \\ A+132=180 \\ \Rightarrow A=180-132=48\degree \end{gathered}

step 2: In the triangle ABC, solve for θ, using the sine rule.

Thus, we have


(\sin A)/(x)=(\sin B)/(h)

By substitution, we have


\begin{gathered} (\sin48)/(16)=(\sin(42-\theta))/(10) \\ this\text{ gives} \\ \sin(42-\theta)=(10*\sin48)/(16) \\ \Rightarrow\sin(42-\theta)=0.46446 \\ take\text{ the sine inverse of both sides,} \\ \sin^(-1)(\sin(42-\theta))=\sin^(-1)(0.46446) \\ \Rightarrow42-\theta=27.68 \\ add\text{ -42 to both sides of the equation} \\ -42+42-\theta=-42+27.68 \\ \Rightarrow-\theta\text{=-14.32} \\ divide\text{ both sides by -1} \\ Hence, \\ \theta\approx\text{14.3 \lparen1 decimal place\rparen} \end{gathered}

Hence, the angle of elevation of the ground, to 1 decimal place, is


14.3\degree

A 10-meter utility pole casts a 16-meter shadow directly down a slope when the angle-example-1
User Raju Ahmed
by
3.0k points
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