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the magnitude and direction of two vectors are shown in the diagram. wh…

Question

the magnitude and direction of two vectors are shown in the diagram. what is the magnitude of their sum? 6, 2√5, 8, 20

Explanation:

Step1: Resolve vectors into components

For the vector with magnitude 2 and angle \(135^\circ\) from the positive x - axis:
The x - component \(v_{1x}=2\cos135^\circ\), and \(\cos135^\circ =-\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\), so \(v_{1x}=2\times(-\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2})=-\sqrt{2}\)
The y - component \(v_{1y}=2\sin135^\circ\), and \(\sin135^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\), so \(v_{1y}=2\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=\sqrt{2}\)

For the vector with magnitude 4 and angle \(45^\circ\) from the positive x - axis:
The x - component \(v_{2x}=4\cos45^\circ\), and \(\cos45^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\), so \(v_{2x}=4\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=2\sqrt{2}\)
The y - component \(v_{2y}=4\sin45^\circ\), and \(\sin45^\circ=\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\), so \(v_{2y}=4\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=2\sqrt{2}\)

Step2: Find the resultant components

The resultant x - component \(V_x = v_{1x}+v_{2x}=-\sqrt{2}+2\sqrt{2}=\sqrt{2}\)
The resultant y - component \(V_y = v_{1y}+v_{2y}=\sqrt{2}+2\sqrt{2}=3\sqrt{2}\)

Wait, there is a mistake above. Let's re - calculate the angle for the first vector. The angle of the first vector with respect to the negative x - axis is \(135^\circ - 90^\circ = 45^\circ\), so the angle with the positive x - axis is \(180^\circ - 45^\circ=135^\circ\), but maybe a better way is to use the angle between the two vectors. The angle between the two vectors: the first vector makes \(135^\circ\) with the positive x - axis, the second makes \(45^\circ\) with the positive x - axis, so the angle between them is \(135^\circ - 45^\circ = 90^\circ\)? Wait, no. Wait, the first vector: if we consider the angle between the two vectors, let's see the direction. The first vector (magnitude 2) is in the second quadrant, making \(135^\circ\) with the positive x - axis, the second (magnitude 4) is in the first quadrant, making \(45^\circ\) with the positive x - axis. The angle between the two vectors is \(135^\circ - 45^\circ=90^\circ\)? Wait, no, \(180 - 135 + 45=90^\circ\). So the two vectors are perpendicular? Wait, no, let's recalculate the components correctly.

Wait, the first vector: angle with positive x - axis is \(135^\circ\), so \(v_{1x}=2\cos135^\circ = 2\times(-\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2})=-\sqrt{2}\), \(v_{1y}=2\sin135^\circ=2\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=\sqrt{2}\)

Second vector: angle with positive x - axis is \(45^\circ\), so \(v_{2x}=4\cos45^\circ = 4\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=2\sqrt{2}\), \(v_{2y}=4\sin45^\circ=4\times\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}=2\sqrt{2}\)

Now, resultant x - component: \(V_x=-\sqrt{2}+2\sqrt{2}=\sqrt{2}\)

Resultant y - component: \(V_y=\sqrt{2}+2\sqrt{2}=3\sqrt{2}\)

Wait, that can't be right. Wait, maybe the angle of the first vector is measured from the negative y - axis? No, the diagram shows the first vector (magnitude 2) has an angle of \(135^\circ\) with respect to the second vector? Wait, no, the diagram has a \(135^\circ\) angle between the two vectors? Wait, the angle between the two vectors: the first vector (magnitude 2) and the second (magnitude 4). Let's look at the angles with the x - axis. The first vector: the angle between it and the negative x - axis is \(45^\circ\) (since \(135^\circ\) from the positive x - axis, so \(180 - 135 = 45^\circ\) from negative x - axis), and the second vector is \(45^\circ\) from positive x - axis. So the angle between the two vectors is \(45^\circ+45^\circ = 90^\circ\)? Wait, no, if one is \(135^\circ\) from positive x - axis and the other is \(45^\circ\) from positive x - axis, the angle between them is \(135 - 45=90^\circ\). So the two vectors are perpendicular? Wait, no, \(135 - 45 = 90\), so the angle between them is \(90^\ci…

Answer:

\(2\sqrt{5}\)