Calulus Help!!!

AACG

Senior member
Dec 6, 2002
205
0
0
Hello everyone,

I was wondering if you could help me out by helping me get started on this problem I have in calculus. The question is for related rates. Here is the question.

A 13 foot ladder is leaning against the side of a house. The foot of the ladder is pulled away from the house at a rate of 2 feet per second. How fast is the top of the ladder descending down the side of the house when the foot of the ladder is 5 feet from the house?

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks AACG
 

Juno

Lifer
Jul 3, 2004
12,574
0
76
Oh boy, I hate all math courses even I passed both Calculus with a grade of C-.
 

AACG

Senior member
Dec 6, 2002
205
0
0
The only reason I asked the question is because I was not in class for the lesson we went over due to my grandfather passing away. I would just like to know how to start the problem that is all. I do not even want the answer.
 

Kyteland

Diamond Member
Dec 30, 2002
5,747
1
81
OK, I'm a sucker for sob stories, so take a look at this link. It sets up the problem.

mathhelp.jpg

Now that you have an equation for ft, you need to do your integration magic to get an equation for ft/s
 

Legendary

Diamond Member
Jan 22, 2002
7,019
1
0
c = 15
a^2+b^2=c^2
da/dt = 2 ft/sec
dc/dt = 0 (ladder doesn't change length)
db/dt = what you're looking for given a = 5

Now think REALLY REALLY REALLY hard.
 

JulesMaximus

No Lifer
Jul 3, 2003
74,556
951
126
Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Do you know how many years it's beed since I studied or used and calulus???

Same here. I'm an accountant and I wouldn't know how to begin trying to solve that question. Nor do I care to. :roll:
 

Fingolfin269

Lifer
Feb 28, 2003
17,948
33
91
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Do you know how many years it's beed since I studied or used and calulus???

Same here. I'm an accountant and I wouldn't know how to begin trying to solve that question. Nor do I care to. :roll:

Thank God. I was starting to wonder if I was the only one who had forgotten most, if not all, of my calculus knowledge. I'd say it's still up there somewhere but I'd really rather not bring it back.
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
Damn, I have a minor in mathematics and I can't remember how to do that. Haven't done any calc in two years.
 

TTM77

Golden Member
Dec 21, 2002
1,280
0
0
Originally posted by: Legendary
c = 15
a^2+b^2=c^2
da/dt = 2 ft/sec
dc/dt = 0 (ladder doesn't change length)
db/dt = what you're looking for given a = 5

Now think REALLY REALLY REALLY hard.

Holy-calculus.

Another way I see this is the sin wave. The top slowly falling while the bottom is pulling away.

I think Legendary is right. It's derivative.
 

TuxDave

Lifer
Oct 8, 2002
10,571
3
71
Originally posted by: TTM77
Originally posted by: Legendary
c = 15
a^2+b^2=c^2
da/dt = 2 ft/sec
dc/dt = 0 (ladder doesn't change length)
db/dt = what you're looking for given a = 5

Now think REALLY REALLY REALLY hard.

Holy-calculus.

Another way I see this is the sin wave. The top slowly falling while the bottom is pulling away.

I think Legendary is right. It's derivative.

Related rate problems are usually done using derivatives. I don't see any simple sine wave solution.
 

civad

Golden Member
May 30, 2001
1,397
0
0
In case your calculus problem is solved, you can start working on your spelling problem...
 

ColdFusion718

Diamond Member
Mar 4, 2000
3,496
9
81
Originally posted by: Legendary
c = 15
a^2+b^2=c^2
da/dt = 2 ft/sec
dc/dt = 0 (ladder doesn't change length)
db/dt = what you're looking for given a = 5

Now think REALLY REALLY REALLY hard.

Where did you get 15 from? The length of the ladder is 13 feet, genius. And why are you using a, b, and c when using X and Y would be more intuitive since they basically tell you what the coordinate system is?

Since it the length does not change, you do not need to treat it as a variable and add confusion with its rate of change (dc/dt). Don't post partial solutions that aren't even correct and try to sound
REALLY REALLY REALLY hard
smart.

Solution:

Let X = distance ladder is away from the wall
Let Y = veritical distance ladder is above the ground

X^2 + Y^2 = 13^2

Now, differentiate both sides:

2X* dX/dt + 2Y*dY/dt = 0

Go back to your triangle to when the ladder is 5 feet above the ground, figure out how far away it is from the wall.

You have:

X^2 + 5^2 = 13^2
X = 12 feet from the wall
Y = 5 feet from the ground when dX/dt = 2 ft/s

Now you have all the necessary information

Plug and chug to get:

2X*dX/dt + 2Y*dY= 0 ---> 2(12)2 + 2(5)dY/dt = 0

10*dY/dt = -48
dY/dt = -4.8 ft/s or 4.8 ft/s downwards

Btw, did you have to think
REALLY REALLY REALLY hard
to solve that problem?

Just in case if everyone is wondering why I'm tripping over this: when you give someone academic help, especially in Calculus, make sure you know what it is you are talking about--if you fvck up, you fvck up the person you are trying to help. Maybe you don't know how hard it is to un-fvck someone's brain after they learn something the wrong way in a subject as difficult as Caculus, but I do.
 

TuxDave

Lifer
Oct 8, 2002
10,571
3
71
Wow... someone pissed in your pants... he posted a 'partial solution' because he believed that the OP should learn how to figure out the rest. I'm pretty sure that Legendary made a simple typo for the c=15... but he posted enough information to get started on the problem.
 

ColdFusion718

Diamond Member
Mar 4, 2000
3,496
9
81
Originally posted by: TuxDave
Wow... someone pissed in your pants... he posted a 'partial solution' because he believed that the OP should learn how to figure out the rest. I'm pretty sure that Legendary made a simple typo for the c=15... but he posted enough information to get started on the problem.

First off, if you are going to flame me, do it right. It's "Wow... someone pissed in their pants."
 

AACG

Senior member
Dec 6, 2002
205
0
0
Originally posted by: civad
In case your calculus problem is solved, you can start working on your spelling problem...


I have a spelling problem where? Also thank you ColdFusion718
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
167
111
www.slatebrookfarm.com
coldfusion - I agree completely with Legendary. I don't know what your problem with his solution is... Furthermore, the OP had already thanked him for the help.
Note the word "HELP." The OP didn't ask someone to do the problem for him, just to help him with it. The relationship necessary to solve the problem is, of course, the pythagorean theorem, which 99% of the time is written in terms of a,b, and c. The only real difference between your solution and his is the substitution of x and y for a and b. Forcing all problems to be in terms of x & y is laziness and reduces a students ability to deal with relationships with other variables. I do not, though, disagree with kyteland's picture that he provided - a picture is worth 1000 words, and lacking a picture, a^2 + b^2 = c^2, take the derivative with respect to t and substitute known values is probably the briefest way to explain the problem. There's absolutely nothing wrong with his inclusion that dc/dt = 0, in fact, IMHO (the opinion of a calculus teacher), dealing with three "variables" now with this problem is probably a better stepping stone to other typical related rates problems, especially those with more than 2 variables, ex. sand falling into a conical pile where V = 1/3*pi*r^2*h. Would you advocate switching the r to x and h to y?? I certainly hope not.
 

OulOat

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2002
5,769
0
0
Originally posted by: ColdFusion718
Originally posted by: Legendary
c = 15
a^2+b^2=c^2
da/dt = 2 ft/sec
dc/dt = 0 (ladder doesn't change length)
db/dt = what you're looking for given a = 5

Now think REALLY REALLY REALLY hard.

Where did you get 15 from? The length of the ladder is 13 feet, genius. And why are you using a, b, and c when using X and Y would be more intuitive since they basically tell you what the coordinate system is?

Since it the length does not change, you do not need to treat it as a variable and add confusion with its rate of change (dc/dt). Don't post partial solutions that aren't even correct and try to sound
REALLY REALLY REALLY hard
smart.

Solution:

Let X = distance ladder is away from the wall
Let Y = veritical distance ladder is above the ground

X^2 + Y^2 = 13^2

Now, differentiate both sides:

2X* dX/dt + 2Y*dY/dt = 0

Go back to your triangle to when the ladder is 5 feet above the ground, figure out how far away it is from the wall.

You have:

X^2 + 5^2 = 13^2
X = 12 feet from the wall
Y = 5 feet from the ground when dX/dt = 2 ft/s

Now you have all the necessary information

Plug and chug to get:

2X*dX/dt + 2Y*dY= 0 ---> 2(12)2 + 2(5)dY/dt = 0

10*dY/dt = -48
dY/dt = -4.8 ft/s or 4.8 ft/s downwards

Btw, did you have to think
REALLY REALLY REALLY hard
to solve that problem?

Just in case if everyone is wondering why I'm tripping over this: when you give someone academic help, especially in Calculus, make sure you know what it is you are talking about--if you fvck up, you fvck up the person you are trying to help. Maybe you don't know how hard it is to un-fvck someone's brain after they learn something the wrong way in a subject as difficult as Caculus, but I do.

For someone so bitchy about correctness, your solution is completely wrong :) X=12 and dX/dt = 2, then t = 6. If t =6 and dY/dt = -4.8, then the ladder ends up underground :) Also, care to explain how you got 2X*dX/dt and 2Y*dY/dt? Do you remember your partial derivatives?