masterofthewave124
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if i had to find a vector of magnitude 27 units which is parallel to 3i+ 4j, what do i have to do first? would i express my answer in ordered pair notation?
masterofthewave124 said:if i had to find a vector of magnitude 27 units which is parallel to 3i+ 4j, what do i have to do first? would i express my answer in ordered pair notation?
arildno said:Note that \frac{1}{5}(3i+4j) is a UNIT vector.
Noone. I just wanted to emphasize that, so that OP could see how a unit vector naturally would occur in his expression.Hootenanny said:Who said it wasn't a unit vector?
arildno said:Noone. I just wanted to emphasize that, so that OP could see how a unit vector naturally would occur in his expression.
is, indeed, the most natural one."I would express your answer in terms of unit vectors."
arildno said:No, but I wanted OP to see why your suggestion
is, indeed, the most natural one.
masterofthewave124 said:thanks for the summary but the way (a • a)b is written, and considering b is a vector and not a scalar, what is the operation here?
The order that I am talking of is the order in which you take the vertices.masterofthewave124 said:arunbg: what order are you talking about?
Yes that wouls be correct .b), would the perimeter be equal to 2(|PQ| + |QR|)?
No, the height would bec), how do i find the height? would it be |RS x RQ|?