Chapter 2 - Force Vectors Scalars and Vectors

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Chapter 2 Force Vectors Scalars and Vectors Vectors A mathematical quantity possessing magnitude and direction.

n. Scalar A mathematical quantity possessing magnitude only. Name some vectors: forces, velocity, displacement Name some scalars: Area, volume, mass energy Representation of vector Bold R Word Processors Book uses this. Arrow R Long Hand, Word Processors Underline R Long Hand, Typewriter, Word Processors Magnitude of a Vector Book uses italics for all scalars R Types of Vectors 1). Fixed (or bound) vectors a vector for which a unique point of application is specified and thus cannot be moved without modifying the conditions of the problem. 2). Free vector a vector whose action is not confined to or associated with a unique line in space. (couple) 3). Sliding vector a vector for which a unique line in space (line of action) must be maintained. For 2 vectors to be equal they must have the same: P P 1). Magnitude 2). Direction They do not need to have the same point of application. A negative vector of a given vector has same magnitude but opposite direction.
P -P

P and P are equal and opposite P + (-P) = 0

Vector Operations Product of a scalar and a vector P + P + P = 4P (the number 4 is a scalar) This is a vector in the same direction as P but 4 times as long. (+n)P = vector same direction as P, n times as long (-n)P = vector opposite direction as P, n times as long Vector Addition The sum of 2 vectors can be obtained by attaching the 2 vectors to the same point and constructing a parallelogram Parallelogram law. R
Q

R=P+Q R = resultant vector Note: The magnitude of P + Q is not usually equal to P Q .


P

Addition of vectors is communative: P + Q = Q + P Triangle Rule


P Q R R Q

Lets add 3 vectors! Parallelogram Law


Q Q P P P

R1

R1

R1 = Q + P Triangle Rule
Q Q P R 1 S Q P R 1

R = R1 + S = Q + P + S
S

P S

R = R1 + S = Q + P + S

R1 = Q + P

Polygon Rule Successive applications of triangle rule. Q Q P S Note: P +Q + S = (P + Q) + S = P + (Q + S) vector addition is associative Vector Subtraction the addition of the corresponding negative vector P Q = P + (-Q)
P R -Q

P S R

Resolution of vector into components A single vector can be represented by 2 or more vectors. These vectors are components of the original vector. Finding these is called resolving the vector into its components. There is an infinite number of ways to resolve one vector.
P1

P2 P

P1

P2

etc.
P

2 cases of particular interest are: 1). One of the 2 components is known. Easy (see above) 2). The line of action of both components is know. When would #2 happen? When you are given a coordinate system!
y P

What are the x and y components of P if P = 1000 lbs, = 30o Px = P cos 30o = 866 lbs Py = P sin 30o = 500 lbs Note: Given Px and Py, what is P? P2 = Px2 + Py2=8662 + 5002 = 1000 lbs

1). Given: The fixed structure shown below. P = 500 N T = 200 N


A 3m P T B

5m
75o

Find: Combine P and T into a single force R

P = 500 T = 200 R

tan

BD 5 sin 75 AD 3 5 cos75

48.4
Law of cosines: c 2 a 2 b 2 2ab cos(c)
R 2 200 2 500 2 2(200)(500) cos(48.4 ) R 396.5 N

Law of sines: 200 396.5 sin sin 48.4

22.2

R 396 .5 N

22.2

2.) Given: A barge is pulled by 2 tugboats. The resultant of the forces exerted by the tugboats is a 5000 pound force directed along the center axis of the barge. A 1
30

B C 2 Find: a). tension in each rope if =45 degrees b). value of such that the tension in rope 2 is minimum.

5000 a).
45 30 T1 T2

T1 T2 5000 sin 45 sin 30 sin 105

T1 3660 lbs T2 2590 lbs


b). 5000 30o Dir of T2? Dir of T2? dir of T1

Dir of T2?

60
T1 5000 cos 30 4330 lbs T2 5000 sin 30 2500 lbs

3). Given: The vertical force F of 350 lbs acts downward at A on the two-membered frame.

45o

A 30o F C

Find: The magnitudes of the two components of F directed along AB and AC.

45 75 60
FAB sin 60 FAC sin 45 350 sin 75

350 lbs

FAB 314 lbs FAC 256 lbs

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