How do you convert 2sinθ-3cosθ=r to rectangular form?

2 Answers
Feb 5, 2017

The answer is (x+3/2)^2+(y-1)^2=13/4

Explanation:

To convert from polar coordinates (r,theta) to rectangular coordinates (x,y), we use the following equations

x=rcostheta, =>, costheta=x/r

y=rsintheta, =>, sintheta=y/r

x^2+y^2=r^2

Therefore

2sintheta-3costheta=r

2/ry-3/rx=r

2y-3x=r^2

2y-3x=x^2+y^2

x^2+3x+y^2-2y=0

(x^2+3x+9/4)+(y^2-2y+1)=9/4+1

(x+3/2)^2+(y-1)^2=13/4

This is the equation of a circle, center (-3/2,1) and radius =sqrt13/2

Feb 5, 2017

2y-3x=x^2+y^2 or y=2+-sqrt(-x^2-3x+1)

Explanation:

You are given an equation in terms of radius, r, and angle, theta. In order to find the rectangular form, you must know the relationships between the polar coordinate system, (r,theta), and the rectangular coordinate system, (x, y).

  • r=sqrt(x^2+y^2)
  • sin(theta)=y/r=y/sqrt(x^2+y^2)
  • cos(theta)=x/r=x/sqrt(x^2+y^2)
  • tan(theta)=y/x

Now we can replace the theta and r in the original problem with expressions in terms of x and y.

2sin(theta)-3cos(theta)=r
2y/sqrt(x^2+y^2)-3x/sqrt(x^2+y^2)=sqrt(x^2+y^2)

Multiply both sides of the equation by sqrt(x^2+y^2)

2y-3x=x^2+y^2

Solving for y, you get

y^2-2y=-x^2-3x ...separate x's and y's
y^2-2y+1=-x^2-3x+1 ...complete the square
(y-2)^2=-x^2-3x+1 ...complete the square
y-2=+-sqrt(-x^2-3x+1) ...square root both sides
y=2+-sqrt(-x^2-3x+1) ...add 2 to both sides

The graph of this is a circle

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