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ENGR 1320 Final Review - Math. Major Topics: Trigonometry Vectors Dot product Cross product Matrices Matrix operations Matrix equations Gaussian Elimination Complex numbers Polar coordinates Exponential form Polynomials Curve fitting Roots Calculus. Trigonometry.
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ENGR 1320 Final Review - Math • Major Topics: • Trigonometry • Vectors • Dot product • Cross product • Matrices • Matrix operations • Matrix equations • Gaussian Elimination • Complex numbers • Polar coordinates • Exponential form • Polynomials • Curve fitting • Roots • Calculus
Trigonometry • We use 3 functions over and over again: sin(θ), cos(θ), tan(θ) • sin(θ) = y/r • cos(θ) = x/r • tan(θ) = y/x • Example: Find the y component of this triangle: r y θ x 10 y pi/3 x
Vectors • Vectors represent a quantity in physical space with magnitude and direction • Knowing the magnitude and angle, trigonometry gives us the x and y components • It works the other way too: given the x and y components, we can find the magnitude and angle • Magnitude from pythagorian theorem • Angle from arc (or inverse) tangent • Example: What is the magnitude of this vector v magnitude v y component 5 θ θ x component 10
Vector Notation • When representing vectors, we can either specify their magnitude and direction, or write them in components. The component method is generally more useful. We use unit vectors i and j to signify the x and y directions, respectively. So a vector that is three units in the x direction and 4 in the y direction would be written: v = 3i + 4j • Question: What is the magnitude of this vector? The angle with the x-axis?
Vector addition • If we have 2 vectors v1 and v2, we can add them together by adding their components: This is the ‘tip to tail’ method
Vector Operations • There are 2 ways of multiplying vectors • Dot product • + • Cross product • See Vectors in MathCAD.pptx • Example: What are the dot and cross products of these two vectors?
Matrices • A matrix is a collection of values in structure. • Special matrix operations: • Transpose See matrix math • Determinant See Determinants and Adjoints • Inverse See matrix inverse
Matrix Equations • We looked at several ways to solve the equation Ax = b. • Matrix inverse (similar to dividing by a matrix) • Gaussian elimination (similar to solving simultaneous algebraic equations) See Gaussian Elimination and More Gaussian Elimination Example: solve using the matrix inverse and gaussian elimination methods
Complex numbers • We often find real applications that contain complex numbers in engineering • Vibrations in mechanics • Stability in control systems • We define the complex number ito be . • Question: what is i2? I3? • This result often arises in solving the quadratic formula: • What are the roots of See Introduction to Complex numbers
Complex numbers • We can write complex numbers in 3 ways: • Components • Specify the real and imaginary components • Polar • Use trigonometry to convert into angles and magnitudes on the complex plane (Argand diagram) • See More complex numbers • Exponential • Taking the angle and magnitude from polar form, write the complex number as an exponential • See Exponential Form • Example: find the roots of and write them in the 3 different forms
Polynomials • A polynomial is an expression that follows the form: • This polynomial is nth order • How many roots does this polynomial have? • We used mathCAD and Matlab to find roots of polynomials of higher order than 2. • See Polynomials, Polynomials in MathCAD
Calculus • We looked at a few basic concepts from calculus • Derivative • The slope of a curve at any point • Integral • The area under the curve at any point • We won’t be using MathCAD on the exam, so you will not be asked to solve equations with derivatives or integrals, but you might be asked questions on these general concepts.
Study Strategy • Exam problems will be similar to homeworks • Several problems have been revisited in this class: • Electric circuits, truss equations, etc… • Look over the first 2 exams for representative problems (particularly the 1st for math-related problems)