Q:

Silvio is an air-traffic controller who must calculate the altitude of an incoming plane. He sees the plane at an angle of elevation of 40 as it flies over a signal tower. Silvio knows the signal tower is 3 miles away, so he creates a trigonometric model to calculate the altitude of the plane relative to his own position. Part A: Did Silvio choose the most appropriate function family for his model? Part B: Which function family correctly models this situation?

Accepted Solution

A:
Since the problem is not telling us the height of Silvio, we are going to assume it is not relevant for our calculations.
Let [tex]h[/tex] the altitude of the incoming plane. We know for our problem that the distance between Silvio and the tower is 3 miles, Also we know that the angle of elevation to the plane is 40°. With this information we can create a triangle as shown in the figure. We need a function that relates the angle of elevation with its opposite and adjacent sides, that function is tangent.
[tex]tan \alpha = \frac{opposite.side}{adjacent.side} [/tex]
[tex]tan(40)= \frac{h}{3} [/tex]
[tex]h=3tan(40)[/tex]
[tex]h=2.5miles[/tex]

We can conclude that we should use the trig function tangent to model this situation; also, we can conclude that the equation that describes this situation is [tex]h=3tan(40)[/tex].