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Real-Life Math

"Roller-coaster designers use math every day," says Ron Toomer. "We use everything from straightforward high school math such as angles and trigonometry to physics math such as the laws of motion to high-level engineering math."

You've just completed the conceptual drawings for a new roller-coaster. It looks really good and the client is quite pleased.

Now you have to transfer your design from freehand drawing into a CAD (computer-aided design) program along with some of your basic calculations. You need it in CAD so that the machinists and technicians can begin creating parts.

In order to give the computer the necessary information, you have to determine the slope of the climb of the coaster. From your drawings, you've determined that the climb starts 5 meters from the loading station at a height of 5 meters.coaster.gif

The end is located 40 meters from the station at a height of 25 meters. The technicians will create the climb portion of the track in halves. That means you'll also need to determine the height of the track halfway up the climb.

Use this formula to calculate the slope:

Slope (M) = rise / run
M = (y2 - y1)/(x2 - x1)

The coordinates for the start and finish of the climb are: (x1, y1) = (0, 5)
(x2, y2) = (40, 25)

This is the equation of a straight line:
y = Mx + b

What slope are you going to enter into the computer? What is the height of the track halfway up the climb?

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