Find Projection of (A+C) in B's Direction

AI Thread Summary
To find the projection of the vector sum (A + C) in the direction of vector B, first calculate (A + C) = <5, -3, 3>. The dot product of (A + C) and B yields a result of 16. The discussion clarifies that the goal is to determine the projection of (A + C) onto B, not the angle between them. The projection can be computed using the dot product and the magnitude of B. Understanding this concept is essential for solving the problem correctly.
LocalStudent
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Homework Statement



The following are all vectors:
A = <2, 1, 1>
B = <1, -2, 2>
C = <3, -4, 2>

Find the projection of (A + C) in the direction of B

Homework Equations



Dot product?


The Attempt at a Solution



I was not sure what the meant in this question.

I added A and C and I got (A+C) = <5, -3, 3>

Then I did (A+C)dot(B) and I got that equal to 16



I was also thinking of dotting (A+C) with the unit vector of B?
 
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Dot product is exactly what you want to do. :smile:

\vec{X}\cdot\vec{Y} = |X|\cdot|Y|cos\theta

You have the dot product, |X|, |Y|, and you need cosine of the angle :wink:
 
Infinitum said:
Dot product is exactly what you want to do. :smile:

\vec{X}\cdot\vec{Y} = |X|\cdot|Y|cos\theta

You have the dot product, |X|, |Y|, and you need cosine of the angle :wink:


So is the question basically asking "What is the angle between (A+C) and B?"
 
LocalStudent said:
So is the question basically asking "What is the angle between (A+C) and B?"

No, it is asking you for the projection(component) of A+C on B. What is the component of a vector X on another vector Y when the angle between them is θ??
 
Infinitum said:
No, it is asking you for the projection(component) of A+C on B. What is the component of a vector X on another vector Y when the angle between them is θ??

ok, I see. Thanks for the help.
 
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