I'm stuck!
A 10' ladder is against the wall. The angle between the top of the ladder and the wall is theta. The distance from the bottom of the ladder to the wall is X. The ladder slides away from the wall. How fast does X change with respect to theta when theta = Pi/3?
I started using the law of Sine to relate theta to X: sin (theta) = X/10
Do I differentiate w.r.t X now?
A 10' ladder is against the wall. The angle between the top of the ladder and the wall is theta. The distance from the bottom of the ladder to the wall is X. The ladder slides away from the wall. How fast does X change with respect to theta when theta = Pi/3?
I started using the law of Sine to relate theta to X: sin (theta) = X/10
Do I differentiate w.r.t X now?
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