A ladder 10 ft long rests against a vertical wall. If the bottom of the ladder slides away from the wall at a rate of 0.8 ft/s, how fast is the angle between the ladder and the ground changing when the bottom of the ladder is 8 ft from the wall?

(That is, find the angle's rate of change when the bottom of the ladder is 8 ft from the wall)

2 Answers
Mar 10, 2018

#- 2/15# radians per second

Explanation:

Denoting the distance in feet between the wall and the base of the ladder by #x# and the angle in radians between the ladder and the ground by #y#, it is noted

#cos(y) = x / 10#

which implies

#y = arccos(x/10)#

Denoting time in seconds by t, it is further noted that

#dy / dt = dy/dx dx/dt# (chain rule)

Noting (using standard table of derivatives for convenience)

#dy/dx = - 1 / (sqrt(1 - (0.1 x)^2)) (0.1)# (also by chain rule)

that is

#dy/dx = - 0.1/(sqrt(1 - 0.01 x^2))#

It is noted from the question that in this particular system

#dx/dt = 0.8# feet per second

So (denoting the derivative as a function of #x#)

#dy/dt (x) = dy/dx dx/dt = - 0.08/(sqrt(1 - 0.01 x^2))#

So

#dy/dt (8) = dy/dx dx/dt = - 0.08/(sqrt(1 - 0.01 (64)))#

#= - 0.08/(sqrt(1 - 0.64)) = - 0.08/(sqrt(0.36))#

#- 0.08/0.6 = - 8/60 = - 2/15# radians per second

Mar 10, 2018

Please see below.

Explanation:

Variables:
#x# = distance between the bottom of the wall and the bottom of the ladder

#theta# = the angle between the ladder and the ground.

Rates of change
#dx/dt = 0.8 # #ft#/#sec#

Find #(d theta)/dt# when #x = 8# #ft#

Equation relating variables
#cos theta = x/10#, so we'll use

#x = 10costheta#

Equation relating the rates of change

#d/dt(x) = d/dt(10costheta)#

#dx/dt = -10sin theta (d theta)/ dt#

Finish
We know #dx/dt = 0.8#.
To find #(d theta)/dt# we need #sin theta# when #x = 8#.

But when #x = 8# we know #cos theta = 8/10#, so we can find #sin theta = 6/10 = 3/5#

#dx/dt = -10sin theta (d theta)/ dt#

#0.8 = -10 (3/5) (d theta)/ dt#

So #(d theta)/dt = -0.8/6 = -8/60 = -2/15 ~~ - 0.133# #rad#/#s#

The angle is decreasing at a rate of #2/5# (or approximately #0.133#) radians per second.