- I've been trying to make sense of what to use in order to solve this any advice?
For the vectors u and v with magnitudes u = 4 and v = 5, find the angle θ between u and v which makes proju v = 3
First, let's agree on notation: \(\displaystyle proj_{\vec u}(\vec v) = \dfrac{{\vec v \cdot \vec u}}{{\vec u \cdot \vec u}}\vec u\) AND \(\displaystyle \|\vec{u}\|^2=\vec u \cdot \vec u\)
- For the vectors u and v with magnitudes u = 4 and v = 5, find the angle θ between u and v which makes proju v = 3
I think we need to get our notation straight. As I remember it, a projection of one vector onto another is another vector (as indicated by pka) so one can't have the projection of u onto v as the scalar 3 as given in the problem. However, one can talk about the component of u in the v direction which is a scalar and that part of pka's formula given by
- I've been trying to make sense of what to use in order to solve this any advice?
For the vectors u and v with magnitudes u = 4 and v = 5, find the angle θ between u and v which makes proju v = 3