Polar Coordinates: Solving for Angle in Second Quadrant | 59.1 Degrees

AI Thread Summary
The angle of 59.1 degrees is located in the second quadrant, and to find the angle from the positive x-axis, the calculation 180 - 59.1 yields 120.9 degrees. The vector has an x component of -24.5 units and a y component of 41.0 units, resulting in a magnitude of 47.8 units calculated using the Pythagorean theorem. To determine the direction, the sine function is used, leading to the same angle of 59.1 degrees. Therefore, the correct angle from the positive x-axis is indeed 120.9 degrees.
chocolatelover
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Homework Statement



The angle is 59.1, which is in the second quadrant. Give the angle from the positive x-axis.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



180-59.1=120.9

Does that look right?

Thank you very much
 
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chocolatelover said:
The angle is 59.1, which is in the second quadrant. Give the angle from the positive x-axis.
Quadrant one is from 0 to 90 degrees. Quadrant two is 90 to 180.
 
Thank you very much

Do you see where I went wrong?

A vector has an x component of -24.5 unites and a y component of 41.0 units. Find the magnitude and direction of this vector (from the positive x-axis)

I got 47.8 by doing (41.0)^2 + (-24.5)^2=c^2
c=47.8 units

In order to find the magnitude I did sin(theta)=41.0/47.8
=59.1 I need the magnitude from the positive x-axis. Would I then take 180-59.1?

Thank you
 
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