Picture a zip line stretched from one cliff to another over a river. On tour day the river is full of crocodiles, so the guide needs the lineâs closest height above the water; if it dips below 20 m anywhere over the river, the trip is off. She canât measure mid-air, but she knows this: the left cliff is 28 m above the water, the right cliff is 20 m above, the landing is 50 m horizontally from the start, and the water extends only the first 30 m. How close will the line get over the water?
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This question launches our chapter. Weâll place the scene on the Cartesian plane, model the cable as a straight line, and use three toolsâdistance, midpoint, and gradient (slope)âto analyze it. These basics turn pictures into numbers and numbers into decisions. Letâs set up the coordinates and begin.ical tools we have.