Final answer:
The problem requires using the Pythagorean theorem to find the rate at which the distance from the boat to the dock is decreasing as the rope is reeled in. This involves differentiating the equation derived from the theorem with respect to time and solving for the rate of change of the boat's distance to the dock when the boat is 8 meters away.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question involves applying the Pythagorean theorem to a real-world problem where a boat is approaching a dock. Given that the boat is being pulled up with a rope through a pulley above it, and the rate at which the rope is being reeled in is known, one can determine how fast the boat is moving towards the dock. To solve this problem, we can set up a relationship in a right-triangle: the distance from the boat to the dock is one leg, the height of the pulley above the boat is the other, and the length of the rope is the hypotenuse.
Using the Pythagorean theorem, we find that with a fixed height of 6 meters and a changing distance x to the dock, the length of the hypotenuse (rope) is √(x^2+6^2). If the rope is being pulled at a constant rate of 3 meters per second, we need to find the rate at which x is changing with respect to time (dx/dt) when x is 8 meters.
Setting up the relationship: (d/dt)[x^2 + 6^2] = (d/dt)[rope length^2], and differentiating both sides with respect to time, we can then plug in the known values and solve for dx/dt, which will give us the speed at which the boat is approaching the dock.