Interesting problem ...
The key is to realize that the wires have some distance to the ground, that does not change.
The pole does change. But the vertical height of the pole plus the distance from the pole to the wires is the distance ground to the wires all the time. In other words, for any angle one has:
D = L * sin(alpha) + d, where D is the distance wires-ground, L is the length of the pole, alpha is the angle, and 'd' is the distance from the top of the (inclined) pole to the wires:
L*sin(40) + 8 = L*sin(60) + 2, so one can get the length of the pole:
L = (8-2)/(sin(60) - sin(40)) = 6/0.2232 = 26.88 ft (be careful to have the calculator in degrees not rad)
So the pole is 26.88 ft long!
If the wires are higher than 26.88 ft, no problem. if they are below, the concerns are justified and it won't pass!
Your statement does not mention the distance between the wires and the ground. Do you have it?
Answer:
Scalene
Step-by-step explanation:
Scalene triangles always have unequal side lengths. Thia triangle has unequal side lengths, therefore it is considered scalene.
Answer:
6
Step-by-step explanation:
From the blue graph of f(x) we can see that the function value is -6 when x = 6. Similarly, g(5) = -5.
Then: 4*f(6) - 6*g(5) becomes:
4*(-6) - 6*(-5), or
-24 + 30 = 6
No it does not. Any function that has any of the same X vaules (The line going up left to right) is not a function.