Related rates problem

chocoholic

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Apr 2, 2013
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This is the question.

"Consider two ships which are joined by a cable attached to each ship at the water line. Suppose the two
ships are 200 metres apart, with the cable stretched tight and attached to a pulley which is anchored
halfway between the ships at a depth of 45 metres. If one ship moves away from the other at 3 km/h,
how quickly is the other ship moving after one minute?"

I know that initially I can use the Pythagorean theorem to make an equation :

let the distance between anchor and ship B be s; the distance between ship A and B is 200m, so the midway through would be 100m.
s^2= 45^2+100^2
s= sqrt (45^2+100^2)



Then I'm stuck...Please help!!
 
From this, you get half the length of the cable, which you can use to get the full length of the cable. This will remain constant throughout the problem.

Let A be the ship which moves first (at 3 km/h) and B be the ship we need to find the speed, while C be the position of the anchor of the cable and D the point vertically above the anchor, between the two ships.

The relation between the distance AD and AC is:
\(\displaystyle AC^2 = 45^2 + AD^2\)

The rate of change of AD becomes:

\(\displaystyle \dfrac{d(AC)}{dt} = \dfrac{d(\sqrt{45^2 + AD^2})}{dt}\)

Since the cable has a constant length, the rate of change of the length BC becomes equal to the rate of change of AD, only negative.

\(\displaystyle \dfrac{d(AC)}{dt} = -\dfrac{d(BC)}{dt}\)

The rate of change of BC and BD is (again Pythagoras):

\(\displaystyle \dfrac{d(BC)}{dt} = \dfrac{d(\sqrt{45^2 + BD^2})}{dt}\)


This gives us:
\(\displaystyle \dfrac{d(AC)}{dt} = \dfrac{d(\sqrt{45^2 + AD^2})}{dt} = -\dfrac{d(BC)}{dt} = -\dfrac{d(\sqrt{45^2 + BD^2})}{dt}\)

\(\displaystyle 3 = -\dfrac{d(\sqrt{45^2 + BD^2})}{dt}\)

\(\displaystyle 3 = -\dfrac12(45^2 + BD^2)^{-0.5}\cdot 2BD\dfrac{d(BD)}{dt}\)

Remember, you need to get the rate of change of BD. You can get the value of BD by using the time elapsed. Can you take it from here?
 
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