They are traveling at right angles to each other so we can say one is traveling north to south and the other west to east. Â Then we can say that there positions, y and x are:
y=150-600t  x=200-800t
By using the Pythagorean Theorem we can find the distance between these two planes as a function of time:
d^2=y^2+x^2, using y and x from above
d^2=(150-600t)^2+(200-800t)^2
d^2=22500-180000t+360000t^2+40000-320000t+640000t^2
d^2=1000000t^2-500000t+62500
d=√(1000000t^2-500000t+6250)
So the rate of change is the derivative of d
dd/dt=(1/2)(2000000t-500000)/√(1000000t^2-500000t+6250)
dd/dt=(1000000t-250000)/√(1000000t^2-500000t+6250)
So the rate depends upon t and is not a constant, so for the instantaneous rate you would plug in a specific value of t...
...
To find how much time the controller has to change the airplanes flight path, we only need to solve for when d=0, or even d^2=0...
1000000t^2-500000t+62500=0
6250(16t^2-8t+1)=0
6250(16^2-4t-4t+1)=0
6250(4t(4t-1)-1(4t-1))=0
6250(4t-1)(4t-1)=0
6250(4t-1)^2=0
4t-1=0
4t=1
t=1/4 hr
Well technically, the controller has t<1/4 because at t=1/4 impact will occur :)