Vector Addition: Finding Displacement Using Magnitude and Direction

AI Thread Summary
To find the displacement of a car driven 175 km west and then 80 km southwest (45°), it's essential to break down the movements into x and y components. The x-component for the southwest leg is calculated using cosine, while the y-component uses sine. After determining both components, they should be added together to find the resultant vector. The magnitude of the displacement can then be found using the Pythagorean theorem, and the direction can be calculated using trigonometric functions. Properly applying these steps will yield the correct displacement values.
wadesweatt
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The Problem:
A car is driven 175 km west and then 80 km southwest (45°). What is the displacement of the car from the point of origin (magnitude and direction)?

I have drawn myself a diagram, and I know you need to use the angles to help decide how much displacement, but I don't know how to use them.

It seems like whenever I get the distance of each vector I can just add those two and it will give me total displacement.

How can I use the distances 175 and 80 with the angles 0 deg. and 45 deg., respectively, to find the total displacement? Is there some sort of equation I'm missing?

Thanks in advance...

Wade
 
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wadesweatt said:
The Problem:
A car is driven 175 km west and then 80 km southwest (45°). What is the displacement of the car from the point of origin (magnitude and direction)?

I have drawn myself a diagram, and I know you need to use the angles to help decide how much displacement, but I don't know how to use them.

It seems like whenever I get the distance of each vector I can just add those two and it will give me total displacement.

How can I use the distances 175 and 80 with the angles 0 deg. and 45 deg., respectively, to find the total displacement? Is there some sort of equation I'm missing?

Thanks in advance...

Wade

If you describe your vectors as x and y components the components may be added together to determine your resultant.
At that point let Pythagoras be your guide.
 
LowlyPion said:
If you describe your vectors as x and y components the components may be added together to determine your resultant.
At that point let Pythagoras be your guide.


I'm not sure I know what you mean? What is X and what is Y? and I still don't get where the angles fit in here...
 
wadesweatt said:
I'm not sure I know what you mean? What is X and what is Y? and I still don't get where the angles fit in here...

They can be whatever you want. I would choose East and North. The only real requirement is that they be orthogonal.
 
ok well I did cos (45)= (x/80) and solved for x to get 42.026. then I added that to 175 to get 217.026 for the final x-component (km). Is this correct or close? My homework says it is wrong, but I can't see why?
 
nobody?
 
wadesweatt said:
ok well I did cos (45)= (x/80) and solved for x to get 42.026. then I added that to 175 to get 217.026 for the final x-component (km). Is this correct or close? My homework says it is wrong, but I can't see why?

What about the y component?
 
well I did sin(45)=(y/80), and got 56.569. This answer is also wrong according to the computer.

Can you or anyone please explain why?
 
bump...
 
  • #10
anybody please... it's due in like 15 minutes...
 
  • #11
wadesweatt said:
well I did sin(45)=(y/80), and got 56.569. This answer is also wrong according to the computer.

Can you or anyone please explain why?

OK you have now the X- component and the Y component use the Pythagorean theorem to solve for the magnitude.

Then figure the angle from sin or cos.
 
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