There is a square pyramid with its vertex on bottom. Its base is 1212 metersmeters on each side. Its height is 44 metersmeters. It is being filled with water at a rate of 99 m^3m3/min. How fast is the depth of the water growing when the depth is 2 meters?

First, I set up the primary equation:
V=1/3bh
(Volume of

Then, I found its derivative:
(dV)/dt=1/3[(b)((dh)/dt)+(h)((db)/dt)]

We know the base and height from the given information, so I plug that in:
9=1/3[(36)((dh)/dt)+(2)((db)/dt)]

We are trying to solve for (dh)/dt, but the (db)/dt is in the way. How do I solve this from here?

1 Answer
Mar 17, 2018

(dh)/dt=1/4 meters/minute

Explanation:

The trick to these types of problems is to try to reduce the amount of different variables you have. You have a square pyramid, and you notice there is a direct relationship between the side and the height. The side is three times the height. We can write this as...

3h=s

In our primary equation:
V=1/3bh

We can rewrite it as:
V=1/3(s^2)h

And then plug in 3h:
V=1/3((3h)^2)h

Simplify:
V=3h^3

Now you can just take the derivative and plug in the given information:
(dV)/dt=9h^2*(dh)/dt

9=9*2^2*(dh)/dt

(dh)/dt=1/4