Vector geometry - determinant proof

bossman007
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Homework Statement



Exercise 44 - In the picture attached

Homework Equations



HINT - expand the expression for n and plug the result into equation (70), then use equation (63)

n=(C-B)X(B-A)

n dot (r - A) = 0 (eq. 70)

A dot (B X C) = det {A B C} (eq. 63)

[PLAIN]http://postimage.org/image/68xx59akh/ [/PLAIN]

[PLAIN]http://postimage.org/image/rzbcga401/ [/PLAIN]

[PLAIN]http://postimage.org/image/wtauu6jv9/ [/PLAIN]

The Attempt at a Solution



Like the hint said, I expanded the expression for n , which is (C-B)X(B-A) and I got a giant mess. I have no idea if I did it right or am doing it right or what to do here
 
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hi bossman007! :smile:
bossman007 said:
Like the hint said, I expanded the expression for n , which is (C-B)X(B-A) and I got a giant mess.

it should come out very simple :confused:

show us what you did :smile:
 
[PLAIN]http://postimage.org/image/j5wfm5rjr/ [/PLAIN]
 
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ohhh! that's why it's a giant mess! :biggrin:

no, keep it simple

use the distributive law …

(C - B) x (B - A) … ? :wink:
 
many thanks :D,

what is the distributive law for 3 vectors?
 
P x (Q + R) = (P x Q) + (P x R) :wink:
 
thank you :D

so that means in my case I do B x (C-A) ?
 
is this right?
 
(just got up :zzz:)
tiny-tim said:
(C - B) x (B - A) … ? :wink:
bossman007 said:
thank you :D

so that means in my case I do B x (C-A) ?

nooo …

how did you get that result? :confused:
 
  • #10
What should this be exactly? I'm not sure I understand either
 
  • #11
bossman007 said:
thank you :D

so that means in my case I do B x (C-A) ?
? There is NO "C- A" in the expression you want to expand!

(C- B)\times (B- A)= C\times(B- A)- B\times(B- A)
That's one step, now do it again:
C\times B- C\times A- B\times B+ B\times A
and, of course, B\times B= 0.
 
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