VECTOR
FOR O LEVEL NOTES
CONTENTS
SCALAR AND VECTOR QUANTITIES
VECTOR DIAGRAM
TRIANGLE LAW OF FORCES
PARALLELOGRAM LAW OF FORCES
RELATIVE MOTION
RESOLUTION OF VECTOR
SCALAR AND VECTOR QUANTITY
In the 19 century,mathematicians developed a more suitable way of describing quantities .They divided quantities into two types which are scalar and vector quantities .
SCALAR QUANTITY:Is the physical quantity that has magnitude only but not direction.
A magnitude is a number that shows the value of the quantity,e.g two meter ,ten kilogram and others.
Example of scalar quantities are Time,Distance,Temperature, Energy, Speed and others.
VECTOR QUANTITY:Is the physical quantity that have both magnitude and direction
Example of vector quantities are Force ,Momentum ,Velocity,Acceleration ad others.
Characteristics of Vectors
The characteristics of
vectors are as followed –
- They possess both magnitudes as
well as direction
- These change if either the
magnitude or direction change or both change
.Comparison between
Scalars and Vectors
Criteria
|
Scalar
|
Vector
|
Definition
|
A
scalar is a quantity with magnitude only.
|
A
vector is a quantity with the magnitude as well as direction.
|
Direction
|
No
direction
|
Yes
there is the direction
|
Specified
by
|
A
number (Magnitude) and a Unit
|
A
number (magnitude), direction and a unit.
|
Represented
by
|
Quantity
symbol
|
Quantity
symbol in bold or an arrow sign above
|
Example
|
Mass
and Temperature
|
Velocity
and Acceleration
|
VECTOR DIAGRAM
Vector diagram is the diagram that
depict the direction and relative magnitude of a vector.
Vector quantities
can be represented using vector diagrams .
An arrow that has been
drawn to scale and facing a specific direction is used to represent
vector.
The arrow has a head
and tail.The length of the arrow represents the magnitude of the
vector while the arrowhead points in the direction of the vector.
A vector quantity can be represented on paper by a direct line segment.
- The length of the line segment
represents the magnitude of a vector.
- The arrow head at the end represent
the direction of a vector
EQUAL VECTOR
Two vectors are equal
if they have the same magnitude and are the same direction ,even if they
do not start from the same point .For example in figure below .
vector a is equal to
vector b ,i.e a =b.
VECTOR ADDITION
It is possible to get
the sum of two or more vectors .The vector after the addition of two or more
vector is called resultant.The resultant vector is equal to the net effect of
the vectors under consideration.
NOTE: Like vectors can
be added up . This means that it cannot add unlike vectors such as displacement
and acceleration.The resultant vector will always have the same magnitude
and direction irrespective of the ordered followed when adding up
the vectors
Methods of Vector
Addition
There are two methods
that are used to sum up two vectors:
1. Triangle
method
2. Parallelogram
method.
Triangle Method
A step-by-step method
for applying the head-to-tail method to determine the sum of two or more vectors
is given below.
1.Choose a scale and
indicate it on a sheet of paper. The best choice of scale is one that will
result in a diagram that is as large as possible, yet fits on the sheet of
paper.
2.Pick a starting
location and draw the first vector to scale in the indicated direction.
Label the magnitude and direction of the scale on the diagram (e.g., SCALE: 1
cm = 20 m).
3.Starting from where
the head of the first vector ends, draw the second vector to scale in the
indicated direction. Label the magnitude and direction of this vector on the
diagram.
4.Draw the resultant
from the tail of the first vector to the head of the last vector. Label this
vector as Resultant or simply R.
5. Using a ruler,
measure the length of the resultant and determine its magnitude by converting
to real units using the scale (4.4 cm x 20 m/1 cm = 88 m).
6. Measure the
direction of the resultant using the counterclockwise convention.
Resultant vector: This
is the vector drawn from the starting point of the first vector to the end point
of the second vector which is the sum of two vectors
Where:
· V1 -
First vector
· V2 -
Second vector
· R
- Resultant vector
EXAMPLE 1
Suppose a man walks
starting from point A, a distance of 20m due North, and then 15m due East. Find
his new position from A.
Solution
Use scale
1CM Represents 5m
Thus
20m due to North
Indicates 4 cm
15m due to East
Indicates 3cm.
Demonstration
he position of D is
represented by Vector AD of magnitude 25M or 5CM at angle of 36051”
Since
- Tan Q = (Opposite /Adjacent)
- Tan Q = 3cm /4cm
- Q = Tan -1 (3/4)
- Q = Tan -1(0.75)
- Q = 35º51”
The Resultant
displacement is 25m ad direction Q = 36º51”
The Triangle and
Parallelogram Laws of Forces
TRIANGLE LAW OF FORCES
Triangle Law of Forces
states that “If three forces are in equilibrium and two of the forces are
represented in magnitude and direction by two sides of a triangle, then the
third side of the triangle represents the third force called resultant force.”
EXAMPLE 2
EXAMPLE 2
A block is pulled by a
force of 4 N acting North wards and another force 3N acting North-East. Find
resultant of these two forces.
Demonstration
Scale
1cm
Represents 1N
Draw a line AB of 4cm
to the North. Then, starting from B, the top vectorofAB, draw a line BC of 3 CM
at 45oEast of North.
Join the line AC and
measure the length (AC = 6.5 cm) which represents 6.5N. Hence, AC is the
Resultant force of two forces 3N and 4N.
PARALLELOGRAM METHOD
In this method, the two
Vectors are drawn (usually to scale) with a common starting point , If the
lines representing the two vectors are made to be sides of a parallelogram,
then the sum of the two vectors will be the diagonal of the parallelogram
starting from the common point.
PARALLELOGRAM LAW
PARALLELOGRAM LAW
The Parallelogram Law
states that “If two vectors are represented by the two sides given and the
inclined angle between them, then the resultant of the two vectors will be
represented by the diagonal from their common point of parallelogram formed by
the two vectors .
EXAMPLE 3
EXAMPLE 3
Two forces AB and AD of
magnitude 40N and 60N respectively, are pulling a body on a horizontal table.
If the two forces make an angle of 30o between them find the
resultant force on the body.
Solutiuon
Choose a scale.
1cm represents 10N
Draw a line AB of 4cm
Draw a line AD of 6cm.
Make an angle of 30o between
AB and AD. Complete the parallelogram ABCD using the two sides AB and include
angle 30O.
Draw the lineAC with a
length of 9.7cm, which is equivalent to 97 N.
The lineAC of the
parallelogram ABCD represents the resultant force of AB and AD in magnitude and
direction.
EXAMPLE 3
Two ropes, one 3m long
and the other and 6m long, are tied to the ceiling and their free ends are
pulled by a force of 100N. Find the tension in each rope if they make an angle
of 30o between them.
Solution
1cm represents 1N
Thus
3cm = represent 3m
6cm = represents 6m
Demonstration.
Tension, determined by
parallelogram method, the length of diagonal using scale is 8.7 cm, which
represents 100N force.
Thus.
Tension in 3m rope = 3
X 100 / 8.7 = 34.5N
Tension in 6m rope = 6
x 100 / 8.7 =69N
Tension force in 3m
rope is 34.5N and in 6m rope is 69N
RELATIVE MOTION
The Concept of Relative
Motion
Relative motion is the
motion of the body relative to the moving observer.
The Relative Velocity
of two Bodies
Relative
velocity (Vr) is the velocity relative to
the moving observer.
CASE 1: If a bus in
overtaking another, a passenger (observer) in the slower bus sees the Relative
Motion
overtaking bus as
moving with a very small velocity.
CASE 2: If the
passenger was in a stationary bus, then the velocity of the overtaking bus
would appear to be greater.
CASE 3: If the observer
is not stationary, then to find the velocity of a body B relative to body A add
velocity of B to A
EXAMPLE 4
If velocity of body B
is VB and that of body A is VA, then the velocity of
B with respect to A , the relative velocity VBA is Given by:
VBA = VB +
(-VA)
That is
VBA = VB –
VA
NOTE:The relative
velocity can be obtained Graphically by applying the Triangle or parallelogram
method.
For same direction
VrBA =
VB - (+VA)
VrBA= VB –
VA ___________________ (I)
For different direction
VrBA =
VB – (-VA)
VrBA =
VB + VA _______________________ (II)
EXAMPLE 5
A man is swimming at 20
m/s across a river which is flowing at 10 m/s. Find the resultant velocity of
the man and his course if the man attempted to swim perpendicular to the water
current.
Solution
Scale
1cm represents 2m/s
- The length of AC is 11.25 cm which
is 22.5 m/s making an angle of 65º25’ with the water current.
- The diagonal AC represent (in
magnitude and direction) the resultant velocity of the man.
THE CONCEPT OF A COMPONENT OF VECTOR
Components of a vector
are vectors which when compounded or added, provides a single vector known as
compounded vector.
Resolved vector is
a single vector which can be split up into component vectors.
Component vectors are
vectors obtained after splitting up or dividing a single vector
Resolution of a Vector
into two Perpendicular Components
Components of a vector
are divided into two parts:
- Horizontal component
- Vertical component
Find the horizontal and
vertical components of a force of 10N acting at 300 to the
vertical.
Find the horizontal and
vertical component of the force in the below diagram
MORE QUESTIONS
- The air craft P and Q are flying with the same speed. The direction along which P is flying its right angle to the direction along which Q is flying. Find the magnitude of the velocity of the aircraft P relative to the aircraft
- An air craft head north east at 320km/h relative to the wind. The wind velocity is 80km/h from the south. Find the velocity of the aircraft relative to the ground
- Acar is travlling due to north at 45km/h. It turns and then travels due to east at 72km/h. Find the magnitude and direction of the resultant velocity of the car .