Asked by Amber

You want to swim straight across a river that is 76m wide. You find that you can do this if you swim 28 degrees upstream at a constant rate of 1.7m/s relative to water. At what rate does the river flow? The angle is measure from the river bank (directly upstream is 0 degrees while directly across the river is 90 degrees.

Answers

Answered by drwls
The answer will not depend upon the width of the river. That number is there to confuse you.

To swim straight across, the swimmer's "relative to water" velocity component in the upstream direction must equal the river's speed downstream. Let the swimming angle relative to water, and the river bank, be A. Let the swimmer's velocity relative to water be v = 1.7 m/s.

v cos A = 1.7 cos 28 = V
V = 1.50 m/s

Answered by ADA TAMI
WHAT IS PHYSICS
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!

Related Questions