Step 1 :Given that the observer for a radar station is located at the origin of a coordinate system, we are to find the bearing of an airplane located at the point (2,-2).
Step 2 :The bearing of an airplane can be calculated using trigonometric functions. It is the angle between the line from the observer to the airplane and the positive x-axis.
Step 3 :The bearing can be expressed in two ways: true bearing and compass bearing.
Step 4 :True bearing is measured in degrees clockwise from the north. To calculate true bearing, we first calculate the angle in standard position (counter-clockwise from the positive x-axis) and then convert it to a bearing (clockwise from the north).
Step 5 :Compass bearing is expressed as a direction (N, S, E, W) and an angle. To calculate compass bearing, we first calculate the angle in standard position and then convert it to a compass direction and an angle.
Step 6 :The coordinates of the airplane are (2, -2). This means the airplane is 2 units to the right and 2 units down from the observer.
Step 7 :We can use the atan2 function to calculate the angle in standard position. The atan2 function returns a value in the range (-pi, pi), so we need to convert this to a value in the range (0, 2pi) by adding 2pi if the result is negative.
Step 8 :Let x = 2 and y = -2. The angle in standard position is approximately 5.50 (in radians).
Step 9 :Converting this to degrees, we get a true bearing of 135.0 degrees.
Step 10 :Converting this to a compass bearing, we get E45.0 degrees.
Step 11 :Final Answer: The true bearing of the airplane is \(\boxed{135^\circ}\). The compass bearing of the airplane is \(\boxed{E45^\circ}\).