235k views
4 votes
Road Trip: Let's say two friends are meeting at a playground. Mary is already at the park but her friend Bobneeds to get there taking the shortest path possible. Bob has two way he can go - he can follow the roads gettingto the park - first heading south 3.miles, then heading west four miles. The total distance covered following theroads will be 7 miles. The other way he can get there is by cutting through some open fields and walk directly to"the park. If we apply Pythagorean theorem

Road Trip: Let's say two friends are meeting at a playground. Mary is already at the-example-1
User Rjsang
by
8.0k points

1 Answer

1 vote

ANSWER

5 miles

Step-by-step explanation

Let's draw the two possible paths Bob can take. One is walking 3 miles south and 4 miles west, and the other is walking in a straight line from where he is to the park,

If Bob takes the red path, the total distance he will travel is 7 miles. If he takes the blue path, the total distance he will travel can be found with the Pythagorean Theorem,


c^2=a^2+b^2

Solve for c taking the square root of both sides,


c=√(a^2+b^2)

Replace a and b, and solve,


c=√(3^2mi^2+4^2mi^2)=√(9mi^2+16mi^2)=√(25mi^2)=√(25)mi=5mi

Hence, the distance Bob will walk if he takes the blue path is 5 miles, which is the shortest path.

Road Trip: Let's say two friends are meeting at a playground. Mary is already at the-example-1
User Runrig
by
8.3k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories