How do you find the magnitude of <-15,-12> and write it as a sum of the unit vectors?

1 Answer
May 3, 2017

See below

Explanation:

The way to find the magnitude is to take the square root of the sum of the squares of the elements in the vectors.

If a vector is <a,b>, then the magnitude =sqrt(a^2+b^2)

This is true no matter how many dimensions the vector is (means that the vector can go on forever: <a,b,c,d....> and you are going to do the same)

So for this vector, you can apply that formula:

sqrt((-15)^2+12^2) = sqrt(225+144) = sqrt369 =3sqrt41

Unit vector means that you want to have a vector with a magnitude of 1 in the same direction, and you can get that by dividing each element of the vector by the magnitude.

So we have: <(-45sqrt41)/369, (36sqrt41)/369>

Simplifying made it (-5sqrt41)/41, (4sqrt41)/41

Hope that helps!