Ch-2 Force Vectors-MMR-SV

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ENGR 201

STATICS
Dr. Muhammad Muhitur Rahman

Chapter 2: Force Vectors

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Chapter Objectives

• Parallelogram Law
• Cartesian vector form
• Dot product and angle between 2 vectors

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Chapter Outline

1. Scalars and Vectors


2. Vector Operations
3. Vector Addition of Forces
4. Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces
5. Cartesian Vectors
6. Addition and Subtraction of Cartesian Vectors
7. Position Vectors
8. Force Vector Directed along a Line
9. Dot Product

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Basic Trigonometry

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Basic Trigonometry

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Properties of Parallelogram

A B A B

D D
C C

There are six important properties of parallelograms to know:


1.Opposite sides are congruent (Equal)(AB = DC).
2.Opposite angels are congruent (D = B).
3.Consecutive angles are supplementary (A + D = 180°).
4.If one angle is right, then all angles are right.
5.The diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other.
6.Each diagonal of a parallelogram separates it into two
congruent Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 7
2.1 Scalars and Vectors

• Scalar
– A quantity (Magnitude) characterized by a positive or
negative number
– Indicated by letters in italic such as A
e.g. Mass, volume and length

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2.1 Scalars and Vectors

• Vector
– A quantity that has magnitude and direction
e.g. Position, Velocity, force and moment
r
– Represent by a letter with an arrow over it, A
r
– Magnitude is designated as A
– In this subject, vector is presented as A and its
magnitude (positive quantity) as A

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2.2 Vector Operations

• Multiplication and Division of a Vector by a Scalar


- Product of vector A and scalar a = aA
- Magnitude = aA =aA
- Law of multiplication applies e.g. A/a = ( 1/a ) A, a≠0

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2.2 Vector Operations

• Vector Addition
- Addition of two vectors A and B gives a resultant
vector R by the parallelogram law
- Result R can be found by triangle construction
- Communicative e.g. R = A + B = B + A
- Special case: Vectors A and B are collinear (both
have the same line of action)

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2.2 Vector Operations

• Vector Subtraction
- Special case of addition
e.g. R’ = A – B = A + ( - B )
- Rules of Vector Addition Applies

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2.3 Vector Addition of Forces

Finding a Resultant Force


• Parallelogram law is carried out to find the resultant
force

• Resultant,
FR = ( F1 + F2 )

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2.3 Vector Addition of Forces

Procedure for Analysis


• Parallelogram Law
– Make a sketch using the parallelogram law
– 2 components forces add to form the resultant force
– Resultant force is shown by the diagonal of the
parallelogram
– The components is shown by the sides of the
parallelogram

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2.3 Vector Addition of Forces

Procedure for Analysis


• Trigonometry
– Redraw half portion of the parallelogram
– Magnitude of the resultant force can be determined
by the law of cosines
– Direction if the resultant force can be determined by
the law of sines
– Magnitude of the two components can be determined by
the law of sines

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Example 2.1

The screw eye is subjected to two forces, F1 and F2.


Determine the magnitude and direction of the resultant
force.

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Solution

Parallelogram Law
Unknown: magnitude of FR and angle θ

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Solution

Trigonometry
Law of Cosines

FR = (100 N )2 + (150 N )2 − 2(100 N )(150 N ) cos115o


= 10000 + 22500 − 30000(− 0.4226 ) = 212.6 N = 213 N

Law of Sines
150 N 212.6 N
=
sin θ sin 115o
sin θ =
150 N
(0.9063)
212.6 N
θ = 39.8o
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Solution

Trigonometry
Direction Φ of FR measured from the horizontal
φ = 39.8o + 15o
= 54.8o ∠φ

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Exercise 2.2
If and θ = 600 and T=5 kN, determine the magnitude of the
resultant force acting on the eyebolt and its direction
measured clockwise from the positive x axis.

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2.4 Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces

• Scalar Notation
– x and y axes are designated positive and negative
– Components of forces expressed as algebraic scalars

as..vectors..F = Fx + Fy
as.magnitudes.Fx = F cos θ and Fy = F sin θ

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2.4 Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces

• Cartesian Vector Notation


– Cartesian unit vectors i and j are used to designate
the x and y directions
– Unit vectors i and j have dimensionless magnitude
of unity ( = 1 )
– Magnitude is always a positive quantity,
represented by scalars Fx and Fy

F = Fxi + Fy j

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2.4 Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces

• Coplanar Force Resultants


To determine resultant of several coplanar forces:
– Resolve force into x and y components
– Addition of the respective components using scalar
algebra
– Resultant force is found using the parallelogram
law
– Cartesian vector notation:
F1 = F1x i + F1 y j
F2 = − F2 xi + F2 y j
F3 = F3 xi − F3 y j
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2.4 Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces

• Coplanar Force Resultants


– Vector resultant is therefore
FR = F1 + F2 + F3
= (FRx )i + (FRy ) j

– If scalar notation are used


FRx = F1x − F2 x + F3 x
FRy = F1 y + F2 y − F3 y

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2.4 Addition of a System of Coplanar Forces

• Coplanar Force Resultants


– In all cases we have
FRx =  Fx
FRy =  Fy * Take note of sign conventions

– Magnitude of FR can be found by Pythagorean Theorem

FRy
FR = F + F
2
Rx
2
Ry and θ = tan -1

FRx

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Example 2.5

Determine x and y components of F1 and F2 acting on the


boom. Express each force as a Cartesian vector.

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Solution

Scalar Notation
F1x = −200 sin 30o N = −100 N = 100 N ←
F1 y = 200 cos 30o N = 173 N = 173 N ↑

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Solution

By similar triangles we have


 12 
F2 x = 260  = 240 N
 13 
5
F2 y = 260  = 100 N
 13 
Scalar Notation: F = 240 N →
2x

F2 y = −100 N = 100 N ↓

Cartesian Vector Notation: F1 = {− 100i + 173 j}N


F2 = {240i − 100 j}N
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Example 2.6

The link is subjected to two forces F1 and F2. Determine


the magnitude and orientation (direction) of the resultant
force.

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Solution I

Scalar Notation: FRx = ΣFx :


FRx = 600 cos 30o N − 400 sin 45o N
= 236.8 N →
FRy = ΣFy :
FRy = 600 sin 30o N + 400 cos 45o N
= 582.8 N ↑

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Solution I

Resultant Force

FR = (236.8 N )2 + (582.8 N )2
= 629 N
From vector addition, direction angle θ is
 582.8 N 
θ = tan 
−1

 236.8 N 
= 67.9o

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Solution II

Cartesian Vector Notation


F1 = { 600cos30°i + 600sin30°j } N
F2 = { -400sin45°i + 400cos45°j } N

Thus,
FR = F1 + F2
= (600cos30ºN - 400sin45ºN)i
+ (600sin30ºN + 400cos45ºN)j
= {236.8i + 582.8j}N
The magnitude and direction of FR are determined in the
same manner as before. 35
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Exercise 2.32
Determine the magnitude of the resultant force
acting on the pin and its direction measured clockwise
from the positive x axis.

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Right-Handed Coordinate System


A rectangular or Cartesian coordinate system is said
to be right-handed provided:
– Thumb of right hand points in the direction of the
positive z axis
– z-axis for the 2D problem would be perpendicular,
directed out of the page.

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Rectangular Components of a Vector


– A vector A may have one, two or three rectangular
components along the x, y and z axes, depending on
orientation
– By two successive application of the parallelogram law
A = A’ + Az
A’ = Ax + Ay
– Combining the equations,
A can be expressed as
A = Ax + Ay + Az

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Unit Vector
– Direction of A can be specified using a unit vector
– Unit vector has a magnitude of 1
– If A is a vector having a magnitude of A ≠ 0, unit
vector having the same direction as A is expressed
by uA = A / A. So that

A = A uA

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Cartesian Vector Representations


– 3 components of A act in the positive i, j and k
directions

A = Axi + Ayj + AZk

*Note the magnitude and direction


of each components are separated,
easing vector algebraic operations.

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Magnitude of a Cartesian Vector


– From the colored triangle, A = A'2 + Az2

– From the shaded triangle, A' = Ax2 + Ay2

– Combining the equations


gives magnitude of A

A = Ax2 + Ay2 + Az2

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Direction of a Cartesian Vector


– Orientation of A is defined as the coordinate
direction angles α, β and γ measured between the
tail of A and the positive x, y and z axes
– 0° ≤ α, β and γ ≤ 180 °
– The direction cosines of A is
Ax Az
cos α = cos γ =
A A
Ay
cos β =
A
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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

Ax Ay Az
cos α = cos β = cos γ =
A A A

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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Direction of a Cartesian Vector


– Angles α, β and γ can be determined by the
inverse cosines
Given
A = Axi + Ayj + AZk
then,

uA = A /A = (Ax/A)i + (Ay/A)j + (AZ/A)k


uA = cosαi + cosβj + cosγk

A = Ax2 + Ay2 + Az2


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2.5 Cartesian Vectors

• Direction of a Cartesian Vector


– uA can also be expressed as
uA = cosαi + cosβj + cosγk

– Since A = Ax2 + Ay2 + Az2 and uA = 1, we have

cos α + cos β + cos γ = 1


2 2 2

– A as expressed in Cartesian vector form is


A = AuA
= Acosαi + Acosβj + Acosγk
= Axi + Ayj + AZk
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2.6 Addition and Subtraction of Cartesian Vectors

• Concurrent Force Systems


– Force resultant is the vector sum of all the forces in
the system

FR = ∑F = ∑Fxi + ∑Fyj + ∑Fzk

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A = Ax + Ay + Az
A = A uA
A = Axi + Ayj + AZk
A = Ax2 + Ay2 + Az2
uA = A /A = (Ax/A)i + (Ay/A)j + (AZ/A)k
uA = cosαi + cosβj + cosγk
cos 2 α + cos 2 β + cos 2 γ = 1
FR = ∑F = ∑Fxi + ∑Fyj + ∑Fzk
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Example 2.8

Express the force F as Cartesian vector.

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Solution

Since two angles are specified, the third angle is found by


cos 2 α + cos 2 β + cos 2 γ = 1
cos 2 α + cos 2 60 o + cos 2 45 o = 1
cos α = 1 − (0 .5 ) − (0 .707 ) = ±0 . 5
2 2

Two possibilities exit, namely


α = cos −1 (0.5)= 60 o
α = cos −1 (− 0.5) = 120o

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Solution

By inspection, α = 60º since Fx is in the +x direction


Given F = 200N
F = Fcosαi + Fcosβj + Fcosγk
= (200cos60ºN)i + (200cos60ºN)j
+ (200cos45ºN)k
= {100.0i + 100.0j + 141.4k}N
Checking:

F = Fx2 + Fy2 + Fz2

= (100.0) + (100.0) + (141.4)


2 2 2
= 200 N
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Example 2.11 Two forces act on the hook shown in Fig. Specify the
magnitude of F and its coordinate direction angles so that the
2

resultant force F acts along the positive y axis and has a


R

magnitude of 800 N.

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Exercise 2.82

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2.7 Position Vectors

• x,y,z Coordinates
 Right-handed
coordinate system
 Positive z axis
points upwards,
measuring the
height of an object
or the altitude of a
point
 Points are
measured relative
to the origin, O.

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2.7 Position Vectors

Position Vector
– Position vector r is defined as a fixed vector which
locates a point in space relative to another point.
– E.g. r = xi + yj + zk

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2.7 Position Vectors

Position Vector
– Vector addition gives rA + r = rB
– Solving
r = rB – rA = (xB – xA)i + (yB – yA)j + (zB –zA)k
or r = (xB – xA)i + (yB – yA)j + (zB –zA)k

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2.7 Position Vectors

• Length and direction of cable AB can be found by


measuring A and B using the x, y, z axes
• Position vector r can be established
• Magnitude r represent the length of cable
• Angles, α, β and γ represent the direction of the cable
• Unit vector, u = r/r

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Example 2.12

An elastic rubber band is attached to points A and B.


Determine its length and its direction measured from A
towards B.

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Solution

Position vector
r = [-2m – 1m]i + [2m – 0]j + [3m – (-3m)]k
= {-3i + 2j + 6k}m

Magnitude = length of the rubber band

r= (− 3)2 + (2)2 + (6)2 = 7m

Unit vector in the director of r


u = r /r
= -3/7i + 2/7j + 6/7k

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Solution

α = cos-1(-3/7) = 115°
β = cos-1(2/7) = 73.4°
γ = cos-1(6/7) = 31.0°

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2.8 Force Vector Directed along a Line

• In 3D problems, direction of F is specified by 2 points,


through which its line of action lies
• F can be formulated as a Cartesian vector
F = F u = F (r/r)

• Note that F has units of forces (N)


unlike r, with units of length (m)

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2.8 Force Vector Directed along a Line

• Force F acting along the chain can be presented as a


Cartesian vector by
- Establish x, y, z axes
- Form a position vector r along length of chain
• Unit vector, u = r/r that defines the direction of both
the chain and the force
• We get F = Fu

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Example 2.13

The man pulls on the cord with a force of 350N.


Represent this force acting on the support A, as a
Cartesian vector and determine its direction.

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Solution

End points of the cord are A (0m, 0m, 7.5m) and


B (3m, -2m, 1.5m)
r = (3m – 0m)i + (-2m – 0m)j + (1.5m – 7.5m)k
= {3i – 2j – 6k}m

Magnitude = length of cord AB

r= (3m )2 + (− 2m )2 + (− 6m )2 = 7m

Unit vector,
u = r /r
= 3/7i - 2/7j - 6/7k
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Solution

Force F has a magnitude of 350N, direction specified by


u.
F = Fu
= 350N(3/7i - 2/7j - 6/7k)
= {150i - 100j - 300k} N

α = cos-1(3/7) = 64.6°
β = cos-1(-2/7) = 107°
γ = cos-1(-6/7) = 149°

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Exercise 2-90

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Exercise 2-90

FR

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2.9 Dot Product

• Dot product of vectors A and B is written as A·B


(Read A dot B)
• Define the magnitudes of A and B and the angle
between their tails
A·B = AB cosθ where 0°≤ θ ≤180°
• Referred to as scalar product of vectors as result is a
scalar

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2.9 Dot Product

• Laws of Operation
1. Commutative law
A·B = B·A
2. Multiplication by a scalar
a(A·B) = (aA)·B = A·(aB) = (A·B)a
3. Distribution law
A·(B + D) = (A·B) + (A·D)

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2.9 Dot Product

• Cartesian Vector Formulation


- Dot product of Cartesian unit vectors
i·i = (1)(1)cos0° = 1
i·j = (1)(1)cos90° = 0
- Similarly
i·i = 1 j·j = 1 k·k = 1
i·j = 0 i·k = 0 j·k = 0

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2.9 Dot Product

• Cartesian Vector Formulation


– Dot product of 2 vectors A and B
A·B = AxBx + AyBy + AzBz (Prove it!!)
• Applications
– The angle formed between two vectors or
intersecting lines.
θ = cos-1 [(A·B)/(AB)] 0°≤ θ ≤180°
– The components of a vector parallel and
perpendicular to a line.
Aa = A cos θ = A·u
A┴=A - Aa
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Example 2.17

The frame is subjected to a horizontal force F = {300j} N.


Determine the components of this force parallel and
perpendicular to the member AB.

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Solution

Since r r r
r
r r 2i + 6 j + 3k
u B = rB =
rB (2)2 + (6)2 + (3)2
r r r
= 0.286i + 0.857 j + 0.429k
Thus
r r
FAB = F cosθ
= F .u B = (300 j ) ⋅ (0.286i + 0.857 j + 0.429k )
rr r r r r

= (0)(0.286) + (300)(0.857) + (0)(0.429)


= 257.1N

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Solution

Since result is a positive scalar, FAB has the same sense


of
r direction
r as uB. Express in Cartesian form
r
FAB = FAB u AB
= (257.1N )(0.286i + 0.857 j + 0.429k )
r r r
r r r
= {73.5i + 220 j + 110k }N
Perpendicular component
r r r r r r r r r r
F⊥ = F − FAB = 300 j − (73.5i + 220 j + 110k ) = {−73.5i + 80 j − 110k }N

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Solution

Magnitude can be determined from F┴ or from


Pythagorean Theorem,
r r2 r 2
F⊥ = F − FAB

= (300 N )2 − (257.1N )2
= 155 N

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Exercise 2.112
Determine the projected component of the force FAB = 560 N
acting along cable AC. Express the result as a Cartesian
vector.

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QUIZ

1. Which one of the following is a scalar quantity?


A) Force B) Position C) Mass D) Velocity

2. For vector addition, you have to use ______ law.


A) Newton’s Second
B) the arithmetic
C) Pascal’s
D) the parallelogram

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QUIZ

3. Can you resolve a 2-D vector along two directions,


which are not at 90° to each other?
A) Yes, but not uniquely.
B) No.
C) Yes, uniquely.

4. Can you resolve a 2-D vector along three directions


(say at 0, 60, and 120°)?
A) Yes, but not uniquely.
B) No.
C) Yes, uniquely.
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QUIZ

5. Resolve F along x and y axes and write it in vector


form. F = { ___________ } N y
A) 80 cos (30°) i – 80 sin (30°) j x
B) 80 sin (30°) i + 80 cos (30°) j 30°
C) 80 sin (30°) i – 80 cos (30°) j
F = 80 N
D) 80 cos (30°) i + 80 sin (30°) j
6. Determine the magnitude of the resultant (F1 + F2)
force in N when F1={ 10i + 20j }N and F2={ 20i + 20j }
N.
A) 30 N B) 40 N C) 50 N
D) 60 N E) 70 N
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QUIZ

7. Vector algebra, as we are going to use it, is based on


a ___________ coordinate system.
A) Euclidean B) Left-handed
C) Greek D) Right-handed E) Egyptian

8. The symbols α, β, and γ designate the __________ of


a 3-D Cartesian vector.
A) Unit vectors B) Coordinate direction angles
C) Greek societies D) X, Y and Z components

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QUIZ

9. What is not true about an unit vector, uA ?


A) It is dimensionless.
B) Its magnitude is one.
C) It always points in the direction of positive X- axis.
D) It always points in the direction of vector A.

10. If F = {10 i + 10 j + 10 k} N and


G = {20 i + 20 j + 20 k } N, then F + G = { ____ } N
A) 10 i + 10 j + 10 k
B) 30 i + 20 j + 30 k
C) – 10 i – 10 j – 10 k
D) 30 i + 30 j + 30 k 82
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QUIZ

11. A position vector, rPQ, is obtained by


A) Coordinates of Q minus coordinates of P
B) Coordinates of P minus coordinates of Q
C) Coordinates of Q minus coordinates of the origin
D) Coordinates of the origin minus coordinates of P

12. A force of magnitude F, directed along a unit vector U, is given


by F = ______ .
A) F (U)
B) U / F
C) F / U
D) F + U
E) F – U
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QUIZ

13. P and Q are two points in a 3-D space. How are the
position vectors rPQ and rQP related?
A) rPQ = rQP B) rPQ = - rQP
C) rPQ = 1/rQP D) rPQ = 2 rQP

14. If F and r are force vector and position vectors,


respectively, in SI units, what are the units of the
expression (r * (F / F)) ?
A) Newton B) Dimensionless
C) Meter D) Newton - Meter
E) The expression is algebraically illegal.
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QUIZ

15. Two points in 3 – D space have coordinates of P (1,


2, 3) and Q (4, 5, 6) meters. The position vector rQP is
given by
A) {3 i + 3 j + 3 k} m
B) {– 3 i – 3 j – 3 k} m
C) {5 i + 7 j + 9 k} m
D) {– 3 i + 3 j + 3 k} m
E) {4 i + 5 j + 6 k} m

16. Force vector, F, directed along a line PQ is given by


A) (F/ F) rPQ B) rPQ/rPQ
C) F(rPQ/rPQ) D) F(rPQ/rPQ)
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QUIZ

17. The dot product of two vectors P and Q is defined as


A) P Q cos θ B) P Q sin θ P

C) P Q tan θ D) P Q sec θ θ

Q
18. The dot product of two vectors results in a _________
quantity.
A) Scalar B) Vector
C) Complex D) Zero

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QUIZ

19. If a dot product of two non-zero vectors is 0, then the two vectors
must be _____________ to each other.
A) Parallel (pointing in the same direction)
B) Parallel (pointing in the opposite direction)
C) Perpendicular
D) Cannot be determined.

20. If a dot product of two non-zero vectors equals -1, then the
vectors must be ________ to each other.
A) Parallel (pointing in the same direction)
B) Parallel (pointing in the opposite direction)
C) Perpendicular
D) Cannot be determined.
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QUIZ

1. The dot product can be used to find all of the following


except ____ .
A) sum of two vectors
B) angle between two vectors
C) component of a vector parallel to another line
D) component of a vector perpendicular to another line

2. Find the dot product of the two vectors P and Q.


P = {5 i + 2 j + 3 k} m
Q = {-2 i + 5 j + 4 k} m
A) -12 m B) 12 m C) 12 m2
D) -12 m2 E) 10 m2 88
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