Question #03abb

2 Answers
Dec 31, 2015

/_ PAQ =60^o

Explanation:

Tony B

The trick is to nearly always draw a diagram and this will help the understanding of what is going on.

Given that: color(white)(..)tan^(-1)(sqrt(3)/2) = theta
and that PC = 2 units marries up very well with triangle PBC. This shows that this diagram is correct.

PC is parallel to AQ so

color(blue)("Force diagram PAQC reviewed against question and confirmed")

/_BAQ = /_BPC = x+theta->color(blue)("Checked and confirmed")

/_ theta =tan^(-1)(sqrt(3)/2)-> color(blue)(" As given and confirmed")
Thus BC=sqrt(3)" and "BA=2

color(magenta)("PA=1 unit from ratio of 2:1") =>PB=1 larr" Updated"

color(blue)("Thus BPAC structure confirmed")
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Using Pythagoras and the given of:
BC=sqrt(3)color(white)(..) ,color(white)(..) PC = 2

BP = sqrt( 2^2 - (sqrt(3))^2) = 1 color(blue)(->" BP confirmed")

color(blue)(Delta" BPC structure confirmed")

color(red)("Whole diagram is confirmed as correct.")
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thus /_ (x+theta)^o = /_BPC ->color(blue)(" Confirmed")

We are asked to find: /_ (x+theta)^o

From the diagram: /_ PAQ = (x+theta)^o = tan^(-1)(sqrt(3)/1)

/_ PAQ =60^o

Jan 1, 2016

The answer is (4) 60^@

Explanation:

The idea here is that you need to draw the x-projection and the y-projection of the resultant, and use the given 1:2 ratio that exists between P and Q to find the tangent of the given angle.

Now, you are told that an angle of

color(red)(alpha) = tan^(-1)(sqrt(3)/2)

exists between the resultant, which we'll call color(blue)(R), and P. This means that the tangent of this angle will be

tan(color(red)(alpha)) = [tan^(1-)(sqrt(3)/2)] = sqrt(3)/2

Keep this in mind. Now, here's a very rough sketch of the two forces

enter image source here

So, P is drawn on the x-axis and the angle color(red)(alpha) is shown in color(red)("red") here.

The resultant, color(blue)(R), will have two projections, one on the x-axis, R_x, and the other on the y-axis, R_y.

The idea here is that you need to write R_x and R_y in terms of P, Q, and color(green)(beta), the angle that exists between the two forces - shown here in color(green)("green").

Now, focus on the triangle marked with light blue lines. Using the angle color(green)(beta), you can say that

R_y = Q * sin(color(green)(beta))

Here Q is the hypotenuse of the aforementioned triangle.

At the same time, you can say that the leg of this triangle located on the x-axis will be equal to Q * cos(color(green)(beta)), which means that R_x will be equal to

R_x = P + Q * cos(color(green)(beta))

Use the given 1:2 ratio that exists between Q and P to write

{(R_y = 2P * sin(color(green)(beta))), (R_y = P + 2P * cos(color(green)(beta))) :}

Finally, focus on the triangle formed by the two projections of the resultant ans the resultant. You know that

tan(color(red)(alpha)) = sqrt(3)/2

At the same time,

tan(color(red)(alpha)) = R_y/R_x

This means that you have

sqrt(3)/2 = (2 color(red)(cancel(color(black)(P))) * sin(color(green)(beta)))/(color(red)(cancel(color(black)(P))) + 2color(red)(cancel(color(black)(P))) * cos(color(green)(beta)))

sqrt(3)/2 = (2sin(color(green)(beta)))/(1 + 2cos(color(green)(beta)))

This is equivalent to

sqrt(3) + 2sqrt(3) * cos(color(green)(beta)) = 4 * sin(color(green)(beta))

Looking at the options given to you, the only one that matches this equation corresponds to color(green)(beta) = 60^@, since

sqrt(3) + 2sqrt(3) * cos(60^@) = 4 * sin(60^@)

sqrt(3) + color(red)(cancel(color(black)(2)))sqrt(3) * 1/color(red)(cancel(color(black)(2))) = 4 * sqrt(3)/2

2sqrt(3) = 2sqrt(3) color(white)(x)color(green)(sqrt())