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CHAP 2 Part II

The document discusses Cartesian vectors and their application in engineering mechanics. It provides an overview of Cartesian vectors, including that they use a coordinate system to describe position and force using unit vectors i, j, and k. Examples are given to demonstrate resolving forces into Cartesian components, adding the components to find the resultant force, and determining the magnitude and direction of the resultant force. The key aspects covered are resolving forces into x and y components, summing the respective components, and using trigonometry to calculate the magnitude and direction of the resultant force from the component forces.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
67 views34 pages

CHAP 2 Part II

The document discusses Cartesian vectors and their application in engineering mechanics. It provides an overview of Cartesian vectors, including that they use a coordinate system to describe position and force using unit vectors i, j, and k. Examples are given to demonstrate resolving forces into Cartesian components, adding the components to find the resultant force, and determining the magnitude and direction of the resultant force. The key aspects covered are resolving forces into x and y components, summing the respective components, and using trigonometry to calculate the magnitude and direction of the resultant force from the component forces.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ENGINEERING MECHANICS

BAA1113

Chapter 2: Force Vectors (Static)


by
Pn Rokiah Bt Othman
Faculty of Civil Engineering & Earth Resources
[email protected]
Chapter Description

• Aims
– To review the Parallelogram Law and Trigonometry
– To explain the Force Vectors
– To explain the Vectors Operations (Parlaw & Cartesian)
– To express force and position in Cartesian Vectors

• Expected Outcomes
– Able to solve the problems of force vectors in the mechanics
applications by using Cartesian Coordinate System

• References
– Russel C. Hibbeler. Engineering Mechanics: Statics & Dynamics,
14th Edition
Chapter Outline

2.1 Scalars and Vectors – part I


2.2 Vectors Operations – part I
2.3 Vectors Addition of Forces – part I
2.4 Cartesian Vectors – part II
2.5 Force and Position Vectors – part III
2.4 Cartesian Vector
 It is a coordinate system
What is
 Use to describe position
Cartesian
 Position can be defined by its coordinate axis
Vector?
 It is a unit vector uA = A / A
z  Its magnitude is 1 and dimensionless
 It is denoted as i,j,k
k
 i is a unit vector pointing in the x direction
i j y  j is a unit vector pointing in the y direction
x  k is a unit vector pointing in the z direction
 +ve direction based on right handed
 It is important in air transport
 Air Traffic controller or pilots must know the
location of every aircraft in the sky
 Without the coordinate system, the position or
location of aircraft is difficult to know and may lead
to aircraft crashes
Source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axes_conventions
Application of Cartesian Vector

 Military Service  Position of any body in the real world

 Location / Geographic /Latitude/longitude  Mapping Project


Application of Cartesian Vector
2-D Resolve
vector into
Addition
vector
vector Components

Step 1

Resolve the vectors into X and Y components

Then add them into respective


Step 2
components
F = Fx i + Fy j
FR = F1 + F2 + F3
= F1x i + F1y j  F2x i + F2y j + F3x i  F3y j
= (F1x  F2x + F3x) i + (F1y + F2y  F3y) j
= (FRx) i + (FRy) j

Step 3
FR  FRx2  FRy2

FRy
  tan 1

F' = F'x i + ( F'y ) j FRx


Application of Cartesian Vector

How to resolve
F = Fx i + Fy j
into components
Vector?
|FX | = FX = F cos θ

|FY | = FY = F sin θ

The magnitude of F

F= FX2 + FY2

The direction of F
θ FY
θ = tan−1
FX
Application of Cartesian Vector

3-D Resolve
vector into
Addition
vector
vector components

The vector A can be resolved as


A = AX i + AY j + AZ k Once the vectors are
present in Cartesian
Given term, it easy to add or
A = AX i + AY j + AZ k subtract
B = BX i + BY j + BZ k
If A + B = C
Sum of the vectors A and B can obtained vector C

C = (AX i + AY j + AZ k ) + (BX i + BY j + BZ k )
= (AX + BX ) i + (AY + BY ) j + (AZ + BZ ) k
= CX i + CY j + CZ k
Application of Cartesian Vector
It should be noted that in 3-D vector information is given as:
How to determine
magnitude and  Magnitude and the coordinate direction angles, or

direction angle in  Magnitude and projection angles

3-D vector?
 Magnitude of a Cartesian Vector A in the x-y plane is A´

- From the colored triangle,

A  A'2  Az2
- From the shaded triangle,

A'  Ax2  Ay2


 The magnitude of the position vector A
-Combining the equations gives magnitude of A

A  Ax2  Ay2  Az2


Application of Cartesian Vector
 The direction or orientation of vector A is
defined by the angles , β, and γ
 These angles are measured between
the vector and the positive X, Y and Z
axes, respectively. Their range of values
are from 0° to 180°
 Using trigonometry, “direction cosines”
are found using
𝐴𝑥 𝐴𝑦 𝐴𝑧
cos𝛼 = cos𝛽 = cos𝛾 = 0° ≤ α, β and γ ≤ 180 °
𝐴 𝐴 𝐴
 These angles are not independent. Its must satisfy the following equation
cos²  + cos²  + cos²  = 1

 It can be derived from the coordinate direction angles and the unit vector
 Unit vector of any position vector is

uA = cos  i + cos  j + cos  k


Application of Cartesian Vector

 uA can also be expressed as

uA = cosαi + cosβj + cosγk


How to determine
direction angle of  A expressed in Cartesian vector form:
Cartesian Vector? A = AuA
= Acosαi + Acosβj + Acosγk

= Axi + Ayj + AZk

Ax Ay Az
cos   cos   cos  
A A A
Example 2.5

Determine the X and Y components of F1 and F2 in Cartesian vectors

F1x  200 sin 30  N  100 N  100 N 


F1 y  200 cos 30  N  173 N  173 N 

Cartesian Vector Notation: F1 = {-100i +173j }N


Example 2.5

Determine the X and Y components of F1 and F2 in Cartesian vectors

F2 x 12

260 N 13
 12  5
F2 x  260 N    240 N F2 y  260 N    100 N
 13   13 
Cartesian Vector Notation: F2 = {240i -100j }N
Example 2.6

Determine the magnitude and direction of the resultant force

Step 1

Resolve the forces into components x


and y

Step 2

Then add the respective components to


get the resultant forces

Step 3

Calculate the magnitude and direction


from the resultant forces
Solution Example 2.6
Step 1

Resolve the forces into components x


and y

F1 = {0 i + 300 j } N

F2 = {– 450 cos (45°) i + 450 sin (45°) j } N


= {– 318.2 i + 318.2 j } N
F3 = { (3/5) 600 i + (4/5) 600 j } N
= { 360 i + 480 j } N
Solution Example 2.6
Step 2

 Summing up all the i and j components respectively:


FR = { (0 – 318.2 + 360) i + (300 + 318.2 + 480) j } N
= { 41.80 i + 1098 j } N

y
Step 3
 Magnitude and direction:
FR
FR = ((41.80)2 + (1098)2)1/2 = 1099 N
  = tan-1(1098/41.80) = 87.8°
x
Example 2.7

Determine the magnitude and direction of the resultant force


Solution Example 2.7
Step 1
Resolve the forces into components

F3 = {-750 sin (45°) i + 750 cos (45°) j } N


{- 530.3 i + 530.3 j } N

F2 = {- 625 sin (30°) i  625 cos (30°) j } N


= {- 312.5 i  541.3 j } N
F1 = {850 (4/5) i  850 (3/5) j } N
= { 680 i  510 j } N
Solution Example 2.7
Step 2

 Summing all the i and j components, respectively:


FR = { (680  312.5  530.3) i + (510  541.3 + 530.3) j }N
= { 162.8 i  520.9 j } N
Step 3
y
  Magnitude and direction (angle):
-162.8 x
FR = (( 162.8)2 + ( 520.9)2) ½ = 546 N

 = tan–1( 520.9 / 162.8 ) = 72.6°
FR
-520.9 From the positive x-axis,  = 253°
Example 2.8

Determine the force F as Cartesian Vector


Step 1 Resolve the forces into components

F = Fcosαi + Fcosβj + Fcosγk

 Two angles are specified, the third


angle is found by

cos 2   cos 2   cos 2   1


cos 2   cos 2 60  cos 2 45  1
cos   1  0.5  0.707   0.5
2 2

 Two possibilities of 
  cos 1 0.5  60 or   cos 1  0.5  120
Solution Example 2.8

By inspection, α = 60° since Fx is in the +x direction


Given F = 200N
F = Fcosαi + Fcosβj + Fcosγk
= (200cos60°N)i + (200cos60°N)j + (200cos45°N)k

Fx = 200 cos 60° = 100 N


Fy = 200 cos 60° = 100 N
FZ = 200 cos 45° = 141.4 N

Now F in Cartesian term : Checking


F  Fx2  Fy2  Fz2
F = {100 i + 100 j + 141.4 k } N
 100.02  100.02  141.42  200 N
Example 2.9
Determine the magnitude and coordinate direction of the
resultant force acting on the ring
Solution Example 2.9

FR = ∑F = F1 + F2
= {60j + 80k}kN + {50i - 100j + 100k}kN
= {50i -40j + 180k}kN
FR  50 2   40 2  180 2
 Magnitude of FR :
 191 .0  191kN
Solution Example 2.9

 Coordinate direction (angle) of FR :

FR = {50i -40j + 180k}kN


- magnitude FR = 191 kN
- uFR = FR /FR

So that

 = cos-1 (FRx / FR) = cos-1 (50 /191) = 74.8°


 = cos-1 (FRy / FR) = cos-1 (-40 /191) = 102°
 = cos-1 (FRz / FR) = cos-1 (180 /191) = 19.5°

Note 𝛽 > 90° since j component of uFR is negative


Example 2.10
Determine the magnitude and coordinate direction of the
resultant force
Solution Example 2.10
Step 1
First resolve the force F1
F1z = - 250 sin 35° = - 143.4 N
F´ = 250 cos 35° = 204.8 N
F´ can be further resolved as

F1x = 204.8 sin 25° = 86.6 N


F1y = 204.8 cos 25° = 185.6 N

Now F1 in 3-D term :


F1 = {86.6 i + 185.6 j  143.4 k } N
Solution Example 2.10

Then resolve the force F2

F2 = 400{ cos 120° i + cos 45° j + cos 60° k } N


= { -200 i + 282.8 j + 200 k } N

F2 = { -200 i + 282.8 j +200 k } N


Solution Example 2.10
Step 2

 Summing all the I, j and k components, respectively:

FR = F1 + F2
F1 = { 86.6 i + 185.6 j  143.4 k} N
F2 = { -200 i + 282.8 j + 200 k} N
FR = { -113.4 i + 468.4 j + 56.6 k} N
Step 3
 Magnitude and coordinate direction (angle):
FR = {(-113.4)2 + 468.42 + 56.62}1/2 = 485.2 = 485 N

 = cos-1 (FRx / FR) = cos-1 (-113.4 / 485.2) = 104°


 = cos-1 (FRy / FR) = cos-1 (468.4 / 485.2) = 15.1°
 = cos-1 (FRz / FR) = cos-1 (56.6 / 485.2) = 83.3°
Example 2.11

Determine the coordinate direction angle of F2, so that the resultant force
FR acts along the positive Y axis and has a magnitude of 800 N
Solution Example 2.11

Step 1

 Cartesian vector form:


FR = F1 + F2
F1 = F1cosα1i + F1cosβ1j + F1cosγ1k
= (300cos45°N)i + (300cos60°N)j+(300cos120°N)k
= {212.1i + 150j - 150k}N

F2 = F2xi + F2yj + F2zk


Solution Example 2.11
 Magnitude of FR is 800N acts in +j direction:
Step 2

FR = F1 + F2 = 800

FR = {212.1i + 150j - 150k}N + (F2Xi + F2Yj + F2Zk) N


800 j = (212.1 +F2X )i + (150+F2Y)j+(-150+F2Z)k

Left and right sides


must be equal

0 = 212.1 +F2X hence F2X = -212.1 N

800 = 150+F2Y hence F2Y = 650 N

0 = -50+F2Z hence F2Z = 150 N


Solution Example 2.11

Given F2 = 700N

F2 = (F2Xi + F2Yj + F2Zk) N


700 = (-212.1i + 650j + 150k) N

So, coordiante
direction of F2

 = cos-1 (F2x / F2) = cos-1 (-212.1 / 700) = 108°


 = cos-1 (F2y / F2) = cos-1 (650 / 700) = 21.8°
 = cos-1 (F2Z / F2) = cos-1 (150 / 700) = 77.6°
Conclusion of The Chapter 2 part II
• Conclusions

- The Cartesian vector have been identified and


determined in the mechanics
- The 2-D and 3-D vector has been represent in a Cartesian
coordinate system
- The magnitude and direction of 2-D and 3-D of resultant
forces have been determined in a Cartesian
coordinate system
Credits to:
Dr Nurul Nadhrah Bt Tukimat
[email protected]

En Khalimi Johan bin Abd Hamid


[email protected]

Roslina binti Omar


[email protected]

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