Calculating Vector Components at 45 Degrees

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At a 45-degree angle, the horizontal and vertical components of a vector are equal and each measure approximately 70.7% of the vector's length. The vector itself acts as the hypotenuse of a right triangle formed by these components. To calculate the components, one can use the cosine or sine of the angle multiplied by the vector's length. For a 45-degree angle, the resultant vector is approximately 1.41 units, making it larger than each component, which are both 1 unit long. Understanding this relationship is key to mastering vector components in physics.
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the question i got was:
will the horizontal and vertical components of a vector at 45degrees to the horizontal be larger or smaller than the vector? By how much?

so far this is what i understand the vertical and horizontal components form a right angle and the vector is the line in the middle. and what I am guessing is that the horizontal component and the vector form a 45 degree angle..but that's all i understood so far...please help!
 
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if you imagine an XY coordinate system, imagine laying the vector on the x-axis then moving it up 45 degrees (its tail at the origin and arrow pointing down the positive x-axis). that is all it is. the way to represent the x/y components of this vector is to make a triangle out of it (with the vector being the hypotenuse). The x component is simply the base of the triangle and the Y component is the height. With a 45 degree angle the x/y components will be the same.

to find the x component of the vector take the cos(angle)*vector or sin(angle)*vector for the y component. In the case of 45 degrees the x/y components will be about 70.7% of what the vector will be
 
thanks man
 
yeah...sorry, but i don't get this..a little help?
(im only in 7th grade tho, so lamens terms please)
 
the angle is at 45°, then the resultant is the square root of 2 which equals 1.41 units. Since both sides will be 1 unit long the resultant will be 0.41 units LARGER.
hope this helps! :)
 
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