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Chapter 6 Vocabulary

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Page 1: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Chapter 6 Vocabulary

Page 2: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Section 6.1 Vocabulary

Page 3: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Oblique Triangles

•Oblique triangles have no right angles.

Page 4: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Law of Sines• If ABC is a triangle with sides a,b, and c then

a/ sin(A) = b/sin(B) = c / sin(C)

*note: law of sines can also be written in reciprocal form

Page 5: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Area of an Oblique Triangle

•Area = ½ bc sin(A) = ½ ab sin(C) = ½ ac sin(B)

Page 6: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Section 6.2 Vocabulary

Page 7: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Law of Cosines•a2 = b2 + c2 -2bc Cos (A)•b2 = a2 + c2 -2ac Cos(B)•c2 = a2 + b2 -2ab cos(C)

Page 8: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Heron’s Area FormulaGiven any triangle with sides of

lengths a, b, and c, the area of the triangle is given by

Area = √[s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)]

Where s = (a + b + c) / 2

Page 9: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Formulas for Area of a triangle

• Standard formArea = ½ bh• Oblique TriangleArea = ½ bc sin(A) = ½ ab sin(C) = ½ ac

sin(B)• Heron’s FormulaArea = √[s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)]

Page 10: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Section 6.3 Vocabulary

Page 11: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Directed line segment

• To represent quantities that have both a magnitude and a direction you can use a directed line segment like the one below:

Initial point

Terminal Point

Page 12: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Magnitude• Magnitude is the length of a

Directed line segment. The magnitude of directed line

segment PQ isRepresented by ||PQ|| and can be

found using the distance formula.

Page 13: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Component form of a vector

• The component form of a vector with initial point P = (p1, p2) and terminal point Q = (q1, q2) is given by

PQ = < q1 - p1 , q2 - p2 > = <v1 , v2> = v

Page 14: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Magnitude formula

• The length or magnitude of a vector is given by

||v|| = √[ (q1 - p1)2 + (q2 - p2)2] =

√( v12+ v2

2)

• If ||v|| = 1, then v is a unit vector• ||v|| = 0 iff v is the zero vector.

Page 15: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Vector addition• Let u = <u1, u2> and v = < v1, v2 >

be vectors. The sum of vectors u and v is the

vectoru + v = < u1+ v1, u2 + v2 >

Page 16: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Scalar multiplication• Let u = <u1, u2> and v = < v1, v2 >

be vectors. And let k be a scalar (a real

number). The scalar multiple of k times u is

the vectorku = k <u1, u2> = <ku1, ku2>

Page 17: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Properties of vector addition/scalar multiplicationu and v are vectors. c and d are scalars

1. u + v = v + u 2. ( u + v) + w = u + ( v + w) 3. u + 0 = u4. u + (-u) = 05. c(du) = (cd)u6. (c + d) u = cu + du7. c( u + v) = cu + cv8. 1(u) = u, 0(u) = 09. ||cv|| = |c| ||v||

Page 18: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

How to make a vector a unit vector

If you want to make vector v a unit vector: u = unit vector = v / || v|| = (1/ ||v||) v Note* u is a scalar multiple of v. The vector

u has a magnitude of 1 and the same direction as v

u is called a unit vector in the direction of v

Page 19: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Standard unit vectors• The unit vectors <1,0> and <0,1>

are called the standard unit vectors and are denoted by

i = <1, 0> and j = <0,1>

Page 20: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

• Given vector v = < v1 , v2>

The scalars v1 and v2 are called the horizontal and vertical components of v, respectively.

The vector sum v1i + v2j

Is a linear combination of the vectors i and j.

Any vector in the plane can be written as a linear combination of unit vectors i and j

Page 21: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

• Given u is a unit vector such that Ѳ is the angle from the positive x axis to u, and the terminal point lies on the unit circle:

U = <x,y> = <cosѲ , sinѲ> = (cosѲ)i + (sinѲ)j

The angle Ѳ is the direction angle of the vector u.

Page 22: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Section 6.4 Vocabulary

Page 23: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Dot product• The dot product of u = <u1, u2> and

v = < v1 , v2> is given by

u · v = u1 v1 + u2 v2

Note* the dot product yields a scalar

Page 24: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Properties of the dot product

1. u · v = v · u2. 0 · v = 03. u · (v + w) = u · v + u · w4. v · v = ||v||2

5. c(u ·v) = cu · v = u · cv

Page 25: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Angle between two vectors

• If Ѳ is the angle between two nonzero vectors u and v, then • cos Ѳ = ( u · v) / ||u|| ||v||

Page 26: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Definition of orthogonal vectors

•The vectors u and v are orthogonal (perpendicular) is u · v = 0

Page 27: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Vector componentsForce is composed of two orthogonal forces w1

and w2 .

F = w1 + w2

w1 and w2 are vector components of F.

Page 28: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Finding vector components• Let u and v be nonzero vectorsAnd u = w1 + w2 ( note w1 and w2 are orthogonal)

w1 = projvu (the projection of u onto v)

W2 = u - w1

Page 29: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Projection of u onto v• Let u and v be nonzero

vectors. The projection of u onto v is given by

Projvu = [(u · v)/ || v||2] v

Page 30: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Section 6.5 Vocabulary

Page 31: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Absolute value of a complex number

• The absolute value of the complex number z = a + bi is given by

|a + bi| = √(a2 + b2)

Page 32: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Trigonometric form of a complex number

• The trigonometric form of the complex number z = a + bi is given by

Z = r (cosѲ + i sinѲ)

Where a = rcos Ѳ, and b = rsin Ѳ, r = √(a2 + b2) , and tan Ѳ = b/a

The number r is the modulus of z, and Ѳ is called an argument of z

Page 33: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Product and quotient of two complex numbers

Let z1 = r1(cosѲ1 + i sin Ѳ1 ) and z2 = r2(cosѲ2 + i sin Ѳ2 ) be complex numbers.

z1 z2 = r1r2[cos(Ѳ1 + Ѳ2) + i sin (Ѳ1 + Ѳ2) ]

z1 /z2 = r1/r2 [cos(Ѳ1 - Ѳ2) + i sin (Ѳ1 - Ѳ2) ], z2 ≠ 0

Page 34: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

DeMoivre’s Theorem • If z = r (cosѲ + i sinѲ) is a

complex number and n is a positive integer, then

zn = [r (cosѲ + i sinѲ)]n

= [rn (cos nѲ + i sin nѲ)]

Page 35: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Definition of an nth root of a complex number

• The complex number u = a + bi is an nth root of the complex number z if

Z = un = (a + bi) n

Page 36: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

Nth roots of a complex number

• For a positive integer n, the complex number\ z = r( cos Ѳ + i sin Ѳ) has exactly n distinct nth roots given by

r1/n ( cos([Ѳ + 2∏k]/n) + i sin ([Ѳ + 2∏k]/n)

Where k = 0,1,2,…, n-1

Page 37: Chapter 6 Vocabulary. Section 6.1 Vocabulary Oblique Triangles Oblique triangles have no right angles

nth roots of unity

•The n distinct roots of 1 are called the nth roots of unity.