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Forensic Science Technician

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Real-Life Math

Ken Moses is the director of a forensic consulting firm. "Math is important in crime scenes. We care about measurements and numbers," he says. "The more careful you measure, the more accurate your conclusion will be."

Police responded to the scene of a shooting at 1411 2nd Ave. on Tuesday evening. When they arrived, they found Elizabeth Dyer dead on the floor from a gunshot wound to the heart. Her husband, Bill Dyer, stated that he had been sitting at his worktable cleaning his pistol when "the darn thing went off," accidentally killing his wife.

The fatal bullet passed through Mrs. Dyer's heart and into the wall 2 feet above the floor at an angle of 30 degrees. The worktable is 8 feet from the wall and is 3.5 feet high.

Using your math skills, find out whether Mr. Dyer should be charged with murder or not. If the shot was fired from the height of the table, he's clear. If it was fired from a higher point, then he'll be under suspicion for murder.

Hint: use the equation:
tan = b (opposite) / a (adjacent)

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