How do you apply trigonometric equations to solve real life problems?

1 Answer
Apr 27, 2018

When at (71.06047^circ W, 43.08350^circ N) a distant cell tower is at heading 131^circ (SE), and at (71.06137^circ W, 43.08007^circ N) it's at heading 99^circ (E). Where is the tower?

Explanation:

Someone from San Antonio requested an answer three years ago! Hope they've figured it out by now.

Here some real life trig I've been meaning to do. I wanted to know where that cell phone tower I can see from my house is. It's on a hill in the distance.

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From one spot near my house, maybe the one in this picture, I pointed my phone at the tower with my GPS app on and got this:

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The relevant information is:

(71.06047^circ W, 43.08350^circ N) heading 131^circ (SE)

At another spot I got

(71.06137^circ W, 43.08007^circ N) heading 99^circ (E)

The heading is relative to due north. Here's a figure.

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We treat west as negative. I translated the origin to #(-71.06, 43,08) and multiplied the coordinates by 100,000 so our new problem is:

(-047, 350) heading 131^circ (SE)

(-137, 007) heading 99^circ (E)

Find Tower coordinates (x,y)

To solve we write the equations of the two lines and find the meet.

When measured relative to the y axis like that, the heading angle theta converts to a slope as m = cot theta.

So our two lines

y - 350 = (x+47) cot 131

(y - 7)= (x+137) cot 99

meet when

350 + (x+47) cot 131 = 7+ (x+137) cot 99

x= {7 + 137 cot 99 -350 - 47 cot 131} /{cot 131 - cot 99} x

x≈ 455.537

y ≈-86.849

That means my tower is at GPS coordinates

(-71.06 +.00456, 43.08 - .000868) = (-71.0554, 43.07132)

Let's check Google Maps. Pretty good, off by around 400 feet.

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