11.07.2015 Views

The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

The Pythagorean Theorem - Educational Outreach

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4.3) Earth, Moon, Sun, and StarsIn this section, we move away from recreational useof the <strong>Pythagorean</strong> <strong>The</strong>orem and back to the physical worldand universe in which we live. In doing so, we will examinethe power of trigonometry as a tool to measure distances. Inparticular, we are interested in inaccessible or remotedistances, distances that we cannot ‘reach out and touch’ inorder to measure directly.<strong>The</strong> first example is determining the height H of theflagpole in front of the local high school. A plethora ofAmerican trigonometry students throughout the years havebeen sent outside to measure the height of the pole,obviously an inaccessible distance unless you entice thelittle guy to shimmy up the pole and drop a plumb bob. Becareful, for the principal may be looking!Figure 4.5 illustrates how we measured that oldschoolhouse flagpole using the elementary ideas oftrigonometry. We walked out a known distance from thebase of pole and sighted the angle from the horizontal to thetop of the pole.AH?5ft50 0 B=25ftFigure 4.5: <strong>The</strong> Schoolhouse FlagpoleNote: Students usually performed this sighting with a hand-madedevice consisting of a protractor and a pivoting soda straw. Inactual surveying, a sophisticated instrument called a theodolite isused to accomplish the same end.144

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