Finding the coordinates and distance of this drawing

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the coordinates and distance of a point P(s,t) in relation to a vector A and the origin. The original poster expresses uncertainty about their drawing and the application of the distance formula, particularly regarding the midpoint assumption and simplification of distance.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between point P and vector A, with one suggesting that P's position vector can be expressed as a fraction of vector A. There is confusion about the midpoint concept and how to derive the coordinates of P from the slopes of the vectors involved.

Discussion Status

The conversation is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the problem. Some guidance has been offered regarding the slopes of the vectors and their relationships, but there is no consensus on the approach or clarity on the definitions being used.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of a drawing that is crucial for understanding the problem, which may not have been adequately described. The original poster also questions the validity of their assumptions regarding the midpoint and the relationship between the vectors involved.

mr_coffee
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Hello everyone, I'm having problems figuring out the distance and the cordinates of the point P(s,t). The directions are in the drawing posted. I'm not sure if i drew the picture right though. I used the distance formula to find the distance between the origin i named <x,y> and the point P(s,t) which is on the vector a = <x1,y1>. But i might have screwed that up too because I assumed its the midpoint of the vector. I don't know how I'm suppose to simplfy |d| in the drawing. Once that's simplified I'm also confused on how that is going to tell me the coordinates of P. Thanks,

http://show.imagehosting.us/show/654150/0/nouser_654/T0_-1_654150.jpg
 
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You didnt't attach it.
 
Sorry about that, thanks for the info, it is now attached!
 
P is a point on the vector A, so P's position vector is given as a fraction (or multiple) of the position vector of A. i.e. OP = λ(x1,y1).

If P were the mid-point of OA (which it isn't) then you would have λ = ½.

You can work out the slope of OA (=m, say) using the coords of A and you know that BP is perpindicular to OA, so you can write the slope of BP in terms of m. You can also work out the slope of BP using the coords of P and B. Now solve for λ, and you can then work out the coords of P and the length of OP.
 
thanks for the reply but I'm lost.
You can work out the slope of OA (=m, say) using the coords of A and you know that BP is perpindicular to OA, so you can write the slope of BP in terms of m. You can also work out the slope of BP using the coords of P and B. Now solve for λ, and you can then work out the coords of P and the length of OP.

Where is the point OA coming from? by OA do u mean the vector O standing for origin and A for the a vector? So your saying set BP, B is a vector <x2,y2> and P is a point with coords (s,t) = m. Am i allowed to do this? BP = (y2-t)/(x2-s); or are u not talking about m = (y2-y1)/(x2-x1)?
 

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