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Ornithologists have determined that some species of birds tend to avoid flights over large bodies of water during daylight hours. It is believed that more energy is required to fly over water than over land because air generally rises over land and falls over water during the day. A bird with these tendencies is released from an island that is 5 km from the nearest point B on a straight shoreline, flies to a point C on the shoreline, and then flies along the shoreline to its nesting area D. Assume that the bird instinctively chooses a path that will minimize its energy expenditure. Points B and D are 13 km apart.

(a) In general, if it takes 1.4 times as much energy to fly over water as it does over land, to what point C should the bird fly in order to minimize the total energy expended in

returning to its nesting area?

(b) Let W and L denote the energy (in joules) per kilometre flown over water and land, respectively. What would a large value of the ratio W/L mean in terms of the bird’s

flight? What would a small value mean? Determine the ratio W/L corresponding to the minimum expenditure of energy.

(c) What should the value of W/L be in order for the bird to fly directly to its nesting area D? What should the value of W/L be for the bird to fly to B and then along the shore to D?

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Patrina Schowalter
Patrina SchowalterLv2
13 May 2020

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