What is the Dot Product of Unit Vectors in Vector Projection?

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The discussion centers on the calculation of the dot product of unit vectors in the context of vector projection, specifically involving unit vectors u' and v' derived from force vectors. The example illustrates how to compute the projection of a force vector F, given as 7 kN, onto the direction of unit vector v'. The formula used is Fy' = 7 kN (u' · v'), where u' = (4i + 2j) / √20 and v' = (3i + 4j) / 5. The key takeaway is that the dot product of the unit vectors provides the directional component of the force along v', which is essential for understanding vector projections in physics.

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teknodude
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I was copying my friends notes and had a hard time understanding one of the examples he had written down from lecture. See the attachment for a the picture of the example. This example looks like a projection of two vectors to me, but I'm not sure.

[tex]u'=\frac{4i+2j}{\sqrt{20}}[/tex] u' = unit vector u in the direction of force
[tex]v'=\frac{3i+4j}{5}[/tex] v' = unit vector v

[tex]Fy' = 7kN (\frac{4i+2j}{\sqrt{20}})\cdot (\frac{3i+4j}{5}) <br /> <br /> = 7kN (\frac{4}{\sqrt{20}} * \frac{3}{5} + \frac{2}{\sqrt{20}} * \frac{4}{5})[/tex]

The unit vectors came from the drawing and are in the direction of the two vectors. The thing i don't get is why are 2 unit vectors being dotted, then multiplied by the magnitude 7 kN?

http://img394.imageshack.us/img394/5998/untitled3bz.png

**EDIT: forgot to include in the image a unit vector symbol in the pic for F, so F = 7 kN e' (e' is a unit vector)
 
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It is the same regardless of how you do it. If you multiply out the magnitude of the F vector onto the F's unit vector, you get the original vector F. You can then dot it against the y vector to find [itex]F \cdot y [/tex] (which I think is what your question is asking).[/itex]
 
The subscript on the Fy should be v' instead! (ie, your e' = v')
that is, your notes found the v' component of the 7kN Force
which original vector was along the u' direction.

F_y would be = F cos(phi), where cos(phi) = u'.j (<=dot product)
 

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