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11-14-2012, 10:35 PM #1
Physics Questions...
All of my CC to whoever can help me with these two
An archaeologist climb a pyramid in Egypt. The pyramid's height is 105.8 m and its width is 216.3 m. What is the magnitude of the displacement of the archaeologist in meters after she has climbed from the bottom of the pyramid to the top?
The archaeologist now climbs the Great Pyramid in Giza, Egypt. The pyramid's height is 136 m and its width is 230. m. What is the direction of the displacement of the archaeologist in degrees above horizontal after she has climbed from the bottom of the pyramid to the top?
Thanks in advance
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11-15-2012, 06:00 PM #2
(105.8)^2 + (216.3)^2 then you take that number and take the square root of it. You should get this 240.78 m. I don't know if it rounds to 240.8 m though it looks like it should in your equation.
The second part remember the SOH CAH TOH method. The sin and cos stuff. If I had a calculator that was doing that stuff I'd figure it out for you but you taking the answer above should get you something in degrees (will be positive) for your answer.Selling All My Cards Here------>Hidden Content
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11-15-2012, 06:14 PM #3
Thanks for the response- apparently there must be a different formula for pyramids or something else since it is 3D because the Pythagorean theorem does not work (unless the online thing is wrong). I have tried those numbers and it marks it incorrect.
Andrew
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11-23-2012, 11:19 AM #4
for the first one, wouldnt this work? need a calc to finish but try and see:
O (theta) = tan-1 (105.8/216.3)
that gives you your angle, then do pythagorean theorm to get your Hypoteneuse and thats your magnitude of displacement
has it been that long since I did physics haha or does this sound correct? try it out see what happensLast edited by andrewconnors9; 11-23-2012 at 11:33 AM.
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11-23-2012, 11:35 AM #5
just because its a pyramid doesnt change anything, as your not using all dimensions of the pyramid, just doesnt make sense to say in the question "the person walked up a paper thin 1-dimensional inclined plane"
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11-23-2012, 03:54 PM #6
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