How to Find a Unit Vector Perpendicular to Another in the XY Plane?

AI Thread Summary
To find a unit vector in the XY plane perpendicular to A = (3,5,1), the dot product A·B must equal zero, leading to the equation 0 = 3B_x + 5B_y. Since B is constrained to the XY plane, B_z is not considered. A suggested unit vector is (1/√34)(-5i + 3j) or equivalently (1/√34)(5i - 3j). The discussion also emphasizes that for B to be a unit vector, the condition B·B = 1 must hold true in component form.
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Homework Statement



Find a unit vector in the xy plane which is perpendicular to A = (3,5,1).

Homework Equations



<br /> A_x{B_{x}} + A_y{B_{y}} + A_z{B_{z}} = \textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B}\\\hat{\textbf{A}} = \frac{\textbf{A}}{|\textbf{A}|}<br />

The Attempt at a Solution



In order to be perpendicular, AB = 0 since a perpendicular 90 degrees would mean cos(90) = 0, so the entire dot product becomes 0.

So:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}} + 1{B_{z}}

But since B doesn't exist on the z plane:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

So:

0 = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

Not sure what to do from here. Using:

\hat{\textbf{B}} = \frac{\textbf{B}}{|\textbf{B}|}

How would I turn this B vector into a unit vector?
 
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PhizKid said:

Homework Statement



Find a unit vector in the xy plane which is perpendicular to A = (3,5,1).

Homework Equations



<br /> A_x{B_{x}} + A_y{B_{y}} + A_z{B_{z}} = \textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B}\\\hat{\textbf{A}} = \frac{\textbf{A}}{|\textbf{A}|}<br />

The Attempt at a Solution



In order to be perpendicular, AB = 0 since a perpendicular 90 degrees would mean cos(90) = 0, so the entire dot product becomes 0.

So:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}} + 1{B_{z}}

But since B doesn't exist on the z plane:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

So:

0 = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

Not sure what to do from here. Using:

\hat{\textbf{B}} = \frac{\textbf{B}}{|\textbf{B}|}

How would I turn this B vector into a unit vector?

How do you get |B| from the components?

ehild
 
you can take (1/√34)(-5i+3j) as your unit vector.
edit-or also 5i-3j in place of -5i+3j.
 
PhizKid said:

Homework Statement



Find a unit vector in the xy plane which is perpendicular to A = (3,5,1).

Homework Equations



<br /> A_x{B_{x}} + A_y{B_{y}} + A_z{B_{z}} = \textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B}\\\hat{\textbf{A}} = \frac{\textbf{A}}{|\textbf{A}|}<br />

The Attempt at a Solution



In order to be perpendicular, AB = 0 since a perpendicular 90 degrees would mean cos(90) = 0, so the entire dot product becomes 0.

So:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}} + 1{B_{z}}

But since B doesn't exist on the z plane:

\textbf{A} \cdot \textbf{B} = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

So:

0 = 3{B_{x}} + 5{B_{y}}

Not sure what to do from here. Using:

\hat{\textbf{B}} = \frac{\textbf{B}}{|\textbf{B}|}

How would I turn this B vector into a unit vector?

If B is a unit vector, then B dotted with B has to be 1. What does this mean in component form?
 
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