I have 2 questions, one specific, the other more general.
The specific question concerns the answer(s) to the following problem:
"A car is on a driveway that is inclined 10 degrees to the horizontal. A force of 490 lb is required to keep the car from rolling down the driveway.
a) Find the weight of the car.
b) Find the force the car exerts on the driveway."
I know a bit about the "decomposition" of vectors, and about the calculation of "work." But I don't feel I'd done a good job, even in setting this problem up, much less in solving it. The examples in the book are sparse, or I wouldn't be bothering you. I'd really appreciate any help.
The second question is more general, about the "decomposition" of vectors. Given vectors A and B, originating at the same point, we "break B down" into 2 new vectors, one parallel to A, with "magnitude along A," and the other orthogonal to A. This "magnitude along A" puzzles me. Is this the WHOLE magnitude of "A"? Or does A, being a different vector from B, also have its own magnitude--distinct from that of the new vector we derived from B?
Thanks so much. This forum really came through for me last time, and hopefully it will again.
I hope you're having a great Labor Day--if you're in the U.S..
The specific question concerns the answer(s) to the following problem:
"A car is on a driveway that is inclined 10 degrees to the horizontal. A force of 490 lb is required to keep the car from rolling down the driveway.
a) Find the weight of the car.
b) Find the force the car exerts on the driveway."
I know a bit about the "decomposition" of vectors, and about the calculation of "work." But I don't feel I'd done a good job, even in setting this problem up, much less in solving it. The examples in the book are sparse, or I wouldn't be bothering you. I'd really appreciate any help.
The second question is more general, about the "decomposition" of vectors. Given vectors A and B, originating at the same point, we "break B down" into 2 new vectors, one parallel to A, with "magnitude along A," and the other orthogonal to A. This "magnitude along A" puzzles me. Is this the WHOLE magnitude of "A"? Or does A, being a different vector from B, also have its own magnitude--distinct from that of the new vector we derived from B?
Thanks so much. This forum really came through for me last time, and hopefully it will again.
I hope you're having a great Labor Day--if you're in the U.S..