60
10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS

10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS

Page 2: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Page 3: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 4: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 5: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 6: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

10.6 VECTOR FUNCTIONS FOR MOTION IN A PLANE

Page 7: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Warning:

Only some of this is review.

Page 8: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Quantities that we measure that have magnitude but not direction are called scalars.

Quantities such as force, displacement or velocity that have direction as well as magnitude are represented by directed line segments.

A

B

initialpoint

terminalpoint

AB��������������

The length is AB��������������

Page 9: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

A

B

initialpoint

terminalpoint

AB��������������

A vector is represented by a directed line segment.

Vectors are equal if they have the same length and direction (same slope).

Page 10: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

A vector is in standard position if the initial point is at the origin.

x

y

1 2,v v

The component form of this vector is: 1 2,v vv

Page 11: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

A vector is in standard position if the initial point is at the origin.

x

y

1 2,v v

The component form of this vector is: 1 2,v vv

The magnitude (length) of 1 2,v vv is:2 2

1 2v v v

Page 12: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

P

Q

(-3,4)

(-5,2)

The component form of

PQ��������������

is: 2, 2 v

v(-2,-2) 2 2

2 2 v

8

2 2

Page 13: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

If 1v Then v is a unit vector.

0,0 is the zero vector and has no direction.

Page 14: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Vector Operations:

1 2 1 2Let , , , , a scalar (real number).u u v v k u v

1 2 1 2 1 1 2 2, , ,u u v v u v u v u v

(Add the components.)

1 2 1 2 1 1 2 2, , ,u u v v u v u v u v

(Subtract the components.)

Page 15: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Vector Operations:

Scalar Multiplication:1 2,k ku kuu

Negative (opposite): 1 21 ,u u u u

Page 16: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

v

vu

u

u+vu + v is the resultant vector.

(Parallelogram law of addition)

Page 17: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

The angle between two vectors is given by:

1 1 1 2 2cosu v u v

u v

This comes from the law of cosines.See page 524 for the proof if you are interested.

Page 18: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

The dot product (also called inner product) is defined as:

1 1 2 2cos u v u v u v u v

Read “u dot v”

Example:

3,4 5,2

3 5 4 2 23

Page 19: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

The dot product (also called inner product) is defined as:

1 1 2 2cos u v u v u v u v

This could be substituted in the formula for the angle between vectors (or solved for theta) to give:

1cos

u v

u v

Page 20: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Find the angle between vectors u and v:

2,3 , 2,5 u v

1cos

u v

u v

Example:

1 2,3 2,5cos

2,3 2,5

1 11cos

13 29

55.5

Page 21: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Application: Example 7

A Boeing 727 airplane, flying due east at 500mph in still air, encounters a 70-mph tail wind acting in the direction of 60o north of east. The airplane holds its compass heading due east but, because of the wind, acquires a new ground speed and direction. What are they?

N

E

Page 22: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Application: Example 7

A Boeing 727 airplane, flying due east at 500mph in still air, encounters a 70-mph tail wind acting in the direction of 60o north of east. The airplane holds its compass heading due east but, because of the wind, acquires a new ground speed and direction. What are they?

N

Eu

Page 23: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Application: Example 7

A Boeing 727 airplane, flying due east at 500mph in still air, encounters a 70-mph tail wind acting in the direction of 60o north of east. The airplane holds its compass heading due east but, because of the wind, acquires a new ground speed and direction. What are they?

N

E

v

u

60o

Page 24: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Application: Example 7

A Boeing 727 airplane, flying due east at 500mph in still air, encounters a 70-mph tail wind acting in the direction of 60o north of east. The airplane holds its compass heading due east but, because of the wind, acquires a new ground speed and direction. What are they?

N

E

v

u

We need to find the magnitude and direction of the resultant vector u + v.

u+v

Page 25: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

N

E

v

u

The component forms of u and v are:

u+v

500,0u

70cos60 ,70sin 60v

500

70

35,35 3v

Therefore: 535,35 3 u v

538.4 22535 35 3 u v

and: 1 35 3tan

535 6.5

Page 26: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

N

E

The new ground speed of the airplane is about 538.4 mph, and its new direction is about 6.5o north of east.

538.4

6.5o

p

Page 27: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Any vector can be written as a linear

combination of two standard unit vectors.

,a bv

1,0i 0,1j

,a bv

,0 0,a b

1,0 0,1a b

a b i j

The vector v is a linear combination

of the vectors i and j.

The scalar a is the horizontal

component of v and the scalar b is

the vertical component of v.

Page 28: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

We can describe the position of a moving particle by a vector, r(t).

tr

If we separate r(t) into horizontal and vertical components,

we can express r(t) as a linear combination of standard unit vectors i and j.

t f t g t r i j f t i

g t j

Page 29: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

In three dimensions the component form becomes:

f g ht t t t r i j k

Page 30: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Graph on the TI-89 using the parametric mode.

MODE Graph……. 2 ENTER

Y= ENTERxt1 t cos t

yt1 t sin t

WINDOW

GRAPH

cos sin 0t t t t t t r i j

8p

Page 31: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Graph on the TI-89 using the parametric mode.

cos sin 0t t t t t t r i j

MODE Graph……. 2 ENTER

Y= ENTERxt1 t cos t

yt1 t sin t

WINDOW

GRAPH

Page 32: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Most of the rules for the calculus of vectors are the same as we have used, except:

Speed v t

velocity vectorDirection

speed

t

tv

v

“Absolute value” means “distance from the origin” so we must use the Pythagorean theorem.

Page 33: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Example 5: 3cos 3sint t t r i j

a) Find the velocity and acceleration vectors.

3sin 3cosd

t tdt

r

v i j

3cos 3sind

t tdt

v

a i j

b) Find the velocity, acceleration, speed and direction of motion at ./ 4t p

Page 34: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Example 5: 3cos 3sint t t r i j

3sin 3cosd

t tdt

r

v i j 3cos 3sind

t tdt

v

a i j

b) Find the velocity, acceleration, speed and direction of motion at ./ 4t p

velocity: 3sin 3cos4 4 4

p p p v i j

3 3

2 2 i j

acceleration: 3cos 3sin4 4 4

p p p a i j

3 3

2 2 i j

Page 35: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Example 5: 3cos 3sint t t r i j

3sin 3cosd

t tdt

r

v i j 3cos 3sind

t tdt

v

a i j

b) Find the velocity, acceleration, speed and direction of motion at ./ 4t p

3 3

4 2 2

p v i j

3 3

4 2 2

p a i j

speed:4

p v

2 23 3

2 2

9 9

2 2 3

direction:

/ 4

/ 4

pp

v

v3/ 2 3/ 2

3 3

i j

1 1

2 2 i j

Page 36: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

Example 6: 3 2 32 3 12t t t t t r i j

2 26 6 3 12d

t t t tdt

r

v i j

a) Write the equation of the tangent where .1t

At :1t 1 5 11 r i j 1 12 9 v i j

position: 5,11 slope:9

12

tangent: 1 1y y m x x

311 5

4y x

3 29

4 4y x

3

4

Page 37: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

The horizontal component of the velocity is .26 6t t

Example 6: 3 2 32 3 12t t t t t r i j

2 26 6 3 12d

t t t tdt

r

v i j

b) Find the coordinates of each point on the path where the horizontal component of the velocity is 0.

26 6 0t t 2 0t t

1 0t t 0, 1t

0 0 0 r i j

1 2 3 1 12 r i j

1 1 11 r i j

0,0

1, 11

p

Page 38: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 39: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 40: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 41: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 42: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 43: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 44: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 45: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 46: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 47: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 48: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 49: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

…interesting how they posed this question. They are not asking for the acceleration at t = 1 they are asking how much of the acceleration helped the velocity! This is not as easy to compute.

Page 50: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE

This is not the acceleration at t = 1. This is how much of the acceleration helped the velocity!

Page 51: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 52: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 53: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 54: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 55: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 56: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 57: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 58: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 59: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE
Page 60: 10.4 MINIMAL PATH PROBLEMS 10.5 MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM PROBLEMS IN MOTION AND ELSEWHERE