Vector Direction (west of North)

  • Thread starter Thread starter baqi
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Direction Vector
AI Thread Summary
A car moving 25 degrees west of north is equivalent to 65 degrees north of west. To solve the problem of the car's final direction and speed after multiple legs of travel, it is essential to convert velocities into distances by multiplying speed by time. The calculations can be approached using either the law of cosines or by treating the journey as two separate triangles. The final results indicate a speed of approximately 4.58 km/h at an angle of 61.1 degrees south of west. Drawing the vectors graphically can also help verify the solution.
baqi
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Hi, my first post.. i am taking an intro physics class at uni and its been awhile since I've taken high school physics.

My question is if a car is moving 25 degrees west of North what direction is that? Is that the same thing as moving 155 degrees north of west?

How do I draw the vector?

Thanks for your help!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
it is the same as 65 degrees North of West
 
vector.jpg
 
okay so here is the question:
a car is driven 25 degrees west of north with a speed of 6.5km/h for 15 min. then due east with a speed of 12km/h for 7.5 min the car completes the final leg in 22 min. What is the final direction and speed of her travel on the final leg (assuming her speed is constant and the car returns to its starting point at the end).
so I've drawn my vectors and I know it is heading west of south but I don't know how to approach this question.
The text I am using is James Walker 3 edition and the examples are absoluetely of no help!

I tried doing it and I got 2.7km/h ( but I don't think it is right)
How should look at this?
 
I did it again and this time I got 10.97km/h 32.5 degrees west of south.(or south of west?)..does that look right?
 
Last edited:
Take out the "of" and substitute the word "from."

"West of North" becomes "west from north." That is start with "due north" and rotate the required number of degrees to the west. You have gone west, from north.

I got 61 degrees south of west, (close to your answer) but the speed I calculted was less than half of what you got.
 
  • Like
Likes gracy
okay I still don't get it...here is what I did:

I treated it as two separate triangles: (can I do that?)
6.5sin(25)=2.747
12-2.747=9.25 km/h
6.5cos(25) =5.89km/h
then c2=a2+b2
 
i calculated 4.58 km/h and 61.1 degrees south of west.

i used the law of cosines

c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2abcos C
c^2 = (1.5^2) + (1.625^2) - (2)(1.5)(1.625)cos 65
c = 1.68 km

speed = 1.68*(60/22)
speed = 4.58 km/h

to get the angle i did...

1.625*sin(25) = .687 km (distance from end of first vector to y axis)
1.5-.687 = .813 km ( horizontal distance from y-axis to end of 2nd vector)

sin(x) = .813/(1.68)
x = 28.9 degrees west of south or 61.1 degrees south of west
 
baqi said:
okay I still don't get it...here is what I did:

I treated it as two separate triangles: (can I do that?)
6.5sin(25)=2.747
12-2.747=9.25 km/h
6.5cos(25) =5.89km/h
then c2=a2+b2


instead of using velocities in your calculations try using distances by taking the velocity and multiplying it by the amount of time the person traveled. For instnace: 6.5 km/h * (15/60) = 1.625 km
 
  • #10
oops sorry didn't read the above post thanks so much that makes more sense
BishopUser said:
i calculated 4.58 km/h and 61.1 degrees south of west.

i used the law of cosines

c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2abcos C
c^2 = (1.5^2) + (1.625^2) - (2)(1.5)(1.625)cos 65
c = 1.68 km
Where did you get those values? (1.5 and the 1.635 from?)
speed = 1.68*(60/22)
speed = 4.58 km/h
60/22 what are those values?

to get the angle i did...

Sorry physics seems to be an extreme weakness for me!
Thanks so much for your help :bugeye:
 
  • #11
1.5 is when you take 12km/h and multiply it by (7.5/60) . since the person traveled 7.5 mins you convert that into hours (7.5/60) which is .125 hours. you multiply that by 12km/h to get the distance traveled (1.5km). use this method to use distances instead of velocities in your calculations

60/22 is simply doing the converion in reverse since i got a distance value and i wanted to turn it back into a velocity (remember 22 is the number of minutes the person traveled on the last leg).

your methods seem correct you just need to use distances instead of velocities
 
Last edited:
  • #12
BishopUser said:
1.5 is when you take 12km/h and multiply it by (7.5/60) . since the person traveled 7.5 mins you convert that into hours (7.5/60) which is .125 hours. you multiply that by 12km/h to get the distance traveled (1.5km). use this method to use distances instead of velocities in your calculations

60/22 is simply doing the converion in reverse since i got a distance value and i wanted to turn it back into a velocity (remember 22 is the number of minutes the person traveled on the last leg).

your methods seem correct you just need to use distances instead of velocities


I get it now.. I tried both ways once treating it as two separate triangles and the second using the cosine law and both worked ... and the angle was found too..

thanks again
 
  • #13
Remember, you can solve this GRAPHICALLY! As long as you draw everything to scale and use a protractor, you can check your answer.
 
Back
Top