Trajectories on circles and spheres Determine whether the following trajectories lie on a circle in ℝ 2 or sphere in ℝ 3 centered at the origin. If so, find the radius of the circle or sphere and show that the position vector and the velocity vector are everywhere orthogonal. 27. r ( t ) = 〈 sin t + 3 cos t , 3 sin t − cos t 〉 , for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π
Trajectories on circles and spheres Determine whether the following trajectories lie on a circle in ℝ 2 or sphere in ℝ 3 centered at the origin. If so, find the radius of the circle or sphere and show that the position vector and the velocity vector are everywhere orthogonal. 27. r ( t ) = 〈 sin t + 3 cos t , 3 sin t − cos t 〉 , for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2 π
Trajectories on circles and spheresDetermine whether the following trajectories lie on a circle in
ℝ
2
or sphere in
ℝ
3
centered at the origin. If so, find the radius of the circle or sphere and show that the position vector and the velocity vector are everywhere orthogonal.
27.
r
(
t
)
=
〈
sin
t
+
3
cos
t
,
3
sin
t
−
cos
t
〉
, for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2π
Quantities that have magnitude and direction but not position. Some examples of vectors are velocity, displacement, acceleration, and force. They are sometimes called Euclidean or spatial vectors.
3.1 Limits
1. If lim f(x)=-6 and lim f(x)=5, then lim f(x). Explain your choice.
x+3°
x+3*
x+3
(a) Is 5
(c) Does not exist
(b) is 6
(d) is infinite
1 pts
Let F and G be vector fields such that ▼ × F(0, 0, 0) = (0.76, -9.78, 3.29), G(0, 0, 0) = (−3.99, 6.15, 2.94), and
G is irrotational. Then sin(5V (F × G)) at (0, 0, 0) is
Question 1
-0.246
0.072
-0.934
0.478
-0.914
-0.855
0.710
0.262
.
2. Answer the following questions.
(A) [50%] Given the vector field F(x, y, z) = (x²y, e", yz²), verify the differential identity
Vx (VF) V(V •F) - V²F
(B) [50%] Remark. You are confined to use the differential identities.
Let u and v be scalar fields, and F be a vector field given by
F = (Vu) x (Vv)
(i) Show that F is solenoidal (or incompressible).
(ii) Show that
G =
(uvv – vVu)
is a vector potential for F.
Chapter 14 Solutions
MyLab Math with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Calculus: Early Transcendentals (3rd Edition)
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