gibbenergy Posted November 12, 2005 Posted November 12, 2005 I don't know how to solve this one. Can anyone help me? A street light is mounted at the top of a 15-ft-tall pole. A man 6 ft tall walks from the pole with a speed of 5ft/s along the straight path. How fast is the tip of his shadow moving when he is 40 ft from the pole?
Garfield Posted November 14, 2005 Posted November 14, 2005 [math]\frac{15*5}{6} = 12.5\frac{ft}{s}[/math]?
Sisyphus Posted November 14, 2005 Posted November 14, 2005 You've got some similar triangles. Therefore: length of shadow:man's height::distance from end of shadow to pole:pole's height Since both the man and the pole have constant heights with a constant ratio of 6:15, so too will the ratio of man's distance to shadow's distance be constant, with the same ratio. So if the man is walking at 5ft/s, the shadow is moving at (15/6)(5ft/s)=12.5ft/s. EDIT: Since this is in the calculus forum, I guess you want a calculus solution. You can write the total length (y) as a function of the man's distance from the pole (x) with y=f(x)=15x/6=5x/2. Also, you can write the man's distance as a function of time: x=g(t)=5t. Combine for f(g(t)) to get total distance as a function of time, y=(15/6)(5t)=75t/6=12.5t. Then you just take its derivative at t=8 to find the ft/s there, which in this case will always just be 12.5.
Garfield Posted November 15, 2005 Posted November 15, 2005 I'm having doubts about 12.5 ft/s... Post height = [math]H[/math] Object height = [math]h[/math] Shadow speed = [math]V[/math] Object speed = [math]v[/math] [math]\frac{H}{h}=\frac{V}{V-v} =>V=\frac{Hv}{H-h}[/math] Then it should be [math]8.(3)\frac{ft}{s}[/math] Is this correct?
Sisyphus Posted November 15, 2005 Posted November 15, 2005 Er, yes... I was a tad mixed up there. The ratio is NOT total distance:man's distance::pole height:man's height but RATHER total distance:total distance - man's distance::pole height:man's height So: The ratio of the shadow to the whole is 2 to 5 (simplified from 6 to 15). Therefore the ratio of the man's distance to the whole is 3 to 5. The speed is constant, so the ratio of the man's speed to the shadow's speed is also 3 to 5. The man's speed is 5ft/s. Therefore, the shadow's speed is 25/3. I put the blame entirely on you.
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