18 feet
The length of the downward sloping side of the ramp would be 18 feet approximately this is pythagarus theorem of the sum of squares. the answer should in fact be the number corresponding to the square root of (10*10+15*15).
The opposite of a height is a depth. The opposite direction measurement of height (vertical) is width (horizontal).
Area of a parallelogram is 'base multiplied to the PERPENDICULAR height. NOT the sloping height.
For certain angles, the answer is yes. For 30o to the horizontal (in the positive x direction), you need to measure the horizontal distance to be twice the vertical distance. For example, draw a triangle with a base length of 10cm and, at a right angle to the base, measure a height of 5cm. The angle to the horizontal (the smaller angle) will be 30o. (The opposite is true for the angle of 60o).
Base * vertical height.
a2 +b2=c2102 + 152 =c2c=18.03 feet
Aha! A question for Arturo Pythagoras! Slope = sqrt(100 + 225), = 18 ft and a third of an inch
The length of the downward sloping side of the ramp would be 18 feet approximately this is pythagarus theorem of the sum of squares. the answer should in fact be the number corresponding to the square root of (10*10+15*15).
Pythagoras rules! The slope will be the square root of (100 + 225) ft ie 18 ft and a third of an inch.
The answer depends on the direction (upward, horizontal, or downward) in which the ball leaves his foot.
The opposite of a height is a depth. The opposite direction measurement of height (vertical) is width (horizontal).
The opposite of a height is a depth. The opposite direction measurement of height (vertical) is width (horizontal).
The height of collimation is the height of the line of sight. It is the vertical distance of the horizontal plane through a telescope.
Neglecting air resistance, the components of acceleration of an object that's dropped, tossed, pitched, flung, lobbed, heaved, launched, or shot are constant. The horizontal component is zero. The vertical component is 9.8 meters per second2, directed downward. These are both constant throughout the object's trajectory.
The horizontal component of a projectile's velocity doesn't change, until the projectile hits somethingor falls to the ground.The vertical component of a projectile's velocity becomes [9.8 meters per second downward] greatereach second. At the maximum height of its trajectory, the projectile's velocity is zero. That's the pointwhere the velocity transitions from upward to downward.
The angle of projection affects the maximum height by determining the vertical and horizontal components of the initial velocity. At 90 degrees (vertical), all the initial velocity is vertical which results in maximum height. As the angle decreases from 90 degrees, the vertical component decreases, leading to a lower maximum height.
"Up and down" is vertical. Side to side (or across) is horizontal. An easy way to remember this is "horizontal" runs like the horizon. The vertical measurment is usually referred to as the height. The length would be the horizontal measurement.