Vector fields in polar coordinates A vector field in polar coordinates has the form F(r, θ) = F(r, θ) ur + g(r, θ) uθ, where the unit
62. Vectors in ℝ2 may also be expressed in terms of polar coordinates. The standard coordinate unit vectors in polar coordinates are denoted ur and uθ (see figure). Unlike the coordinate unite vectors in Cartesian coordinates, ur and uθ change their direction depending on the point (r, θ). Use the figure to show that for r > 0, the following relationships among the unit vectors in Cartesian and polar coordinates hold:
ur = cos θi + sin θj i = ur cos θ − uθ sin θ
uθ = sin θi + cos θj j = ur sin θ + uθ cos θ
66. F = r uθ
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 17 Solutions
Calculus, Early Transcendentals, Single Variable Loose-Leaf Edition Plus MyLab Math with Pearson eText - 18-Week Access Card Package
Additional Math Textbook Solutions
Introductory Statistics
Elementary Statistics
University Calculus: Early Transcendentals (4th Edition)
Basic Business Statistics, Student Value Edition
Elementary Statistics (13th Edition)
Algebra and Trigonometry (6th Edition)
- Question 4 The plot below represents the function f(x) 8 7 3 pts O -4-3-2-1 6 5 4 3 2 + 1 2 3 5 -2+ Evaluate f(3) f(3) = Solve f(x) = 3 x= Question 5arrow_forwardQuestion 14 6+ 5 4 3 2 -8-2 2 3 4 5 6 + 2 3 4 -5 -6 The graph above is a transformation of the function f(x) = |x| Write an equation for the function graphed above g(x) =arrow_forwardQuestion 8 Use the graph of f to evaluate the following: 6 f(x) 5 4 3 2 1 -1 1 2 3 4 5 -1 t The average rate of change of f from 4 to 5 = Question 9 10 ☑ 4parrow_forward
- Question 15 ✓ 6 pts 1 Details The function shown below is f(x). We are interested in the transformed function g(x) = 3f(2x) - 1 a) Describe all the transformations g(x) has made to f(x) (shifts, stretches, etc). b) NEATLY sketch the transformed function g(x) and upload your graph as a PDF document below. You may use graph paper if you want. Be sure to label your vertical and horizontal scales so that I can tell how big your function is. 1- 0 2 3 4 -1- Choose File No file chosen Question 16 0 pts 1 Detailsarrow_forwardhelparrow_forwardQuestion 2 Let F be a solenoidal vector field, suppose V × F = (-8xy + 12z², −9x² + 4y² + 9z², 6y²), and let (P,Q,R) = V²F(.725, —.283, 1.73). Then the value of sin(2P) + sin(3Q) + sin(4R) is -2.024 1.391 0.186 -0.994 -2.053 -0.647 -0.588 -1.851 1 ptsarrow_forward
- 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 .arrow_forwardanswerarrow_forward1. Given the vector field F(x, y, z) = -zi, verify the relation 1 VF(0,0,0) lim +0+ volume inside S ff F• Nds S. where S, is the surface enclosing a cube centred at the origin and having edges of length 2€. Then, determine if the origin is sink or source.arrow_forward
- Let a = (-4, 5, 4) and 6 = (1,0, -1). Find the angle between the vector 1) The exact angle is cos 2) The approximation in radians isarrow_forwardFind the (exact) direction cosines and (rounded to 1 decimal place) direction angles of = (3,7,6)arrow_forwardLet a = (-1, -2, -3) and 6 = (-4, 0, 1). Find the component of b onto a.arrow_forward
- Algebra & Trigonometry with Analytic GeometryAlgebraISBN:9781133382119Author:SwokowskiPublisher:Cengage