Asked by girly girl

Two satellites are in Earth's orbit and are 424 km apart. If an observer is 658 km away from satellite A and 471 km away from satellite B, what angle must the observer turn his telescope to change his view from one satellite to another?
a. 40.0 degrees
b. 45.5 degrees
c. 50.0 degrees
d. 44.5 degrees

I know I have to use the SSS formula, but I don't know how to tell which is a, b, or c.

The formulas are:
cos A=(b^2+c^2-a^2)/(2bc)
cos B=(a^2+c^2-b^2)/(2ac)
cos C=(a^2+b^2-c^2)/(2ab)

Answers

Answered by Damon
C is the angle you want to know. Side c is the side opposite the angle C
c^2 = a^2 + b^2 -2 a b cos C
[ note, if C were 90 degrees you would have c^2 = a^2+b^2, makes it easy to see]
so
424^2 = 471^2 + 658^2 - 2*471*658 cos C
Answered by CARISSa
For the practice check
1. D
2. B
3. A
4. B
Answered by Lula
^^^100%
Answered by Miku
For the following quick check, the answers are
1. A) 1.7
2. D) 64.4
3. A) 140, E) 24, F) 16
4. C) 106 mi.
Answered by Bot
Sorry, as an AI language model, I cannot display or access the questions related to this quick check as they are not provided in the given context. Kindly provide me with the questions and options to assist you with the answers.

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