Cross Product of vectors in vector mechanics by beer and johnston

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the cross product of two vectors, P and Q, as presented in "Vector Mechanics" by Beer and Johnston. A participant questions how the equation P x Q = P x Q' holds true despite changes in vector Q and the angle θ. It is clarified that while the magnitudes and angles change, they do so in a way that maintains the area of the parallelogram formed by P and Q, leading to equal cross products. The relationship between Q and Q' ensures that the increase in magnitude of Q' and the decrease in angle compensate for each other. Understanding this geometric relationship is crucial to grasping why the cross products remain equal.
chiraganand
Messages
111
Reaction score
1
Hi,

I was reading vector mechanics by beer and jhonston. I came across the equation wherein the cross prodcut of two vectors P and Q is given. It says P x Q = P x Q` . I am not bale to understand how dis is possible. Because as the vector Q changes even the angle teetha will change then how are both equal?

I am going by the procedure that if Q changes even teetha changes and thus the rhs can not be equal to LHS. I am attaching the two pages 77 and 78 of the book. The equation is given on page 78. Can someone please explain this to me
 

Attachments

Physics news on Phys.org
You are correct that the angle between Q and P is not the same as the angle between Q' and P. However, the length of Q is also not the same as the length of Q'. The cross product depends on both of these things. It might not be immediately obvious why these two changes exactly compensate for one another and leave the cross product unchanged, and it is possible to actually show it mathematically, but I think the intuitive description given in the text regarding the area of the parallelogram generated by P and Q (or P and Q') is a much better way of thinking about it. Keep in mind that Q and Q' are not two arbitrary vectors; they are related to each other in that their difference is parallel to P. That relationship implies that the parallelogram generated by P and Q has the same area as the one generated by P and Q'; this is depicted in Fig. 3.7.

By the way, if you still want to work it out mathematically, let \theta be the angle between P and Q and \theta' the angle between P and Q'. The aforementioned relationship between Q and Q' implies Q \sin \theta = Q' \sin \theta'. If you can work that out, then it's obvious that the cross products with P are equal since you just have to multiply both sides of the previous equation by P.
 
Last edited:
chiraganand said:
Hi,

I was reading vector mechanics by beer and jhonston. I came across the equation wherein the cross prodcut of two vectors P and Q is given. It says P x Q = P x Q` . I am not bale to understand how dis is possible. Because as the vector Q changes even the angle teetha will change then how are both equal?

I am going by the procedure that if Q changes even teetha changes and thus the rhs can not be equal to LHS. I am attaching the two pages 77 and 78 of the book. The equation is given on page 78. Can someone please explain this to me

The vector Q' is larger in magnitude than the vector Q, but the angle between Q' and P is smaller than the angle between Q and P. For the parallelogram geometry that they discuss, the two changes exactly cancel out so that P x Q' = P x Q.

Chet
 
Thanks guys... but how can we be sure that the increase in magnitude and decrease in angle is exactly dat much to make it equal to the orignal cross product
 
chiraganand said:
Thanks guys... but how can we be sure that the increase in magnitude and decrease in angle is exactly dat much to make it equal to the orignal cross product
This is a geometry problem involving parallelograms that you should be able to work out on your own. Just drop a normal from each of the points Q and Q' to the line of action of P.

Chet
 
Back
Top