Finding angle for this resultant vector

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
3 replies · 5K views
RandellK02
Messages
7
Reaction score
0
Hello I am working on this problem and just can't figure it out...


Consider two displacements, one of magnitude 3.0 m and another of magnitude 3.8 m. What angle between the directions of this two displacements give a resultant displacement of magnitude (a) 5.7 m, (b) 2.5 m, and (c) 3.6 m.



I have tried to draw the triangle and then use law of cosines and sines to find the appropriate angle but it seems to not be going the way I want it. Is this the correct solution or is there another way to go?

Any help is greatly appreciated.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Welcome to PF!

Hello RandellK02! Welcome to PF! :wink:
RandellK02 said:
I have tried to draw the triangle and then use law of cosines and sines to find the appropriate angle but it seems to not be going the way I want it. Is this the correct solution or is there another way to go?

It should work.

(You are drawing the two given sides head-to-tail, aren't you?)

Show us one of your attempts. :smile:
 


Okay I will retry my math.
Thanks
 
Website states this is Incorrect.

Consider two displacements, one of magnitude 2.9 m and another of magnitude 4.4 m. What angle between the directions of this two displacements give a resultant displacement of magnitude (a) 5.6 m, (b) 2.9 m, and (c) 4.6 m.

98.1
40.7
75.0