Question #69623

2 Answers
Feb 16, 2018

#x#-component is #=-21.65# Meters

#y#-component is #=-12.5# Meters

Explanation:

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#OA# represents the displacement.

#OB# represents the #x# component of this displacement.

#BA# represents the #y# component of it.

In the right triangle #Delta OAB#,:

#sin/_AOB=sin210^@=-sin30^@=(BA)/(OA)=(BA)/25=-1/2#

#BA=-25/2=-12.5# Meters

#cos/_AOB=cos210^@=-cos30^@=(OB)/(OA)=(OB)/25=-sqrt3/2#

#OB=-(25sqrt3)/2=-21.65# Meters

Feb 16, 2018

The x-component # = -21.65 m# and the y-component # = -12.5 m#.

Explanation:

OK. I will walk you thru how to do this. Draw x and y axes. Off to the right, along the x axis, is zero degrees. The direction 210 from the x axis is 210 degrees, counterclockwise from the x axis. Click this link to see a picture
images.search.yahoo.com

Add a line on your x-y axes from the origin like the red line on the website that the link brought up. The inner blue arc is a #210^@# arc. If that arc had gone only to the -x axis, that would be #180^@#. Therefore the angle between the -x axis and the line you added for #210^@# is a #30^@# angle.

Now, put your trigonometry skills to work. Let the line you drew have a length of 25 m. From the end of that 25 m line, draw a line to the -x axis, parallel to the -y axis. Including the -x axis, you have a right triangle. We established at the end of the previous paragraph that the most acute angle of that triangle is a #30^@# angle. Using your trigonometry skills, what is the length of the side of the triangle along the x axis? (Ignore for now that this is in the negative x direction.)

I got #25 m*cos30^@ = 21.65 m#

Now, let's do that with the angle being #210^@#.

#25 m*cos210^@ = -21.65 m#

So, using #210^@# as the angle gives you the answer to the question "what is the x component of that displacement?"

Using that process, the y component of that displacement is

#25 m*sin210^@ = -12.5 m#

I hope this helps,
Steve