Height of the Tower
How do these measurements enable you to find the height of this tower?
Problem
Billy has been asked to work out the height of a tower which is on the other side of a river. He only has an inclinometer (to measure angles) and a measuring tape. He doesn't know how wide the river is.
If Billy stands directly opposite the tower, the angle of elevation is 30$^\text{o}$, and if he walks 36 metres backwards, the angle of elevation is 24$^\text{o}$, as shown in the diagram.
How tall is the tower?
If Billy stands directly opposite the tower, the angle of elevation is 30$^\text{o}$, and if he walks 36 metres backwards, the angle of elevation is 24$^\text{o}$, as shown in the diagram.
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How tall is the tower?
Student Solutions
Labelling the width of the river as $d$ and the height of the tower as $h$, as shown below, we can then use trigonometry.
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From the triangle containing the 30$^\text{o}$ angle, $\tan{30}=\dfrac{h}{d}\Rightarrow d\tan{30}=h$.
From the triangle containing the 24$^\text{o}$ angle, $\tan{24}=\dfrac{h}{d+36}\Rightarrow (d+36)\tan{24}=h$.
These are simultaneous equations in $h$ and $d$ (since $\tan{30}$ and $\tan{24}$ are just numbers, which can be found using a calculator at any point).
Solving by substitution
The aim is to get $h$ on its own, so making $d$ the subject of the first equation gives $d=\dfrac{h}{\tan{30}}$.
Substituting this into the second equation gives $$\begin{align}&\left(\dfrac{h}{\tan{30}}+36\right)\tan{24}=h\\
\Rightarrow&\frac{h\tan{24}}{\tan{30}}+36\tan{24}=h\\
\Rightarrow&36\tan{24}=h-h\dfrac{\tan{24}}{\tan{30}}\\
\Rightarrow&36\tan{24}=h\left(1-\dfrac{\tan{24}}{\tan{30}}\right)\\
\Rightarrow&36\tan{24}=h\left(\dfrac{\tan{30}-\tan{24}}{\tan{30}}\right)\\
\Rightarrow&36\tan{24}\dfrac{\tan{30}}{\tan{30}-\tan{24}}=h\\
\Rightarrow &70.041=h\end{align}$$
So the tower is 70 metres tall.
Finding $d$ then $h$
If $d\tan{30}=h$ and $(d+36)\tan{24}=h,$ then $d\tan{30}=(d+36)\tan{24}.$ So $d\tan{30}-d\tan{24}=36\tan{24}$, so $d=\dfrac{36\tan{24}}{\tan{30}-\tan{24}}=121.31.$
And $d\tan{30}=h,$ so $h=\tan{30}\times 121.31=70.041$. So the tower is 70 metres tall.