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Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Convert Rectangular Coordinates To Polar Coordinates And Vice Versa
Convert into rectangular coordinates.
If the angle in the polar coordinates is , that means it's in the second quadrant, and away from the x-axis.
This means that the x-coordinate will be negative, and the y-coordinate will be positive:
We can find the x-coordinate using cosine:
multiply both sides by 7
, however we know that the x-coordinate is negative, so we'll use -5.66.
We can find the y-coordinate using sine:
multiply both sides by 7
the coordinates are .
Example Question #11 : Convert Rectangular Coordinates To Polar Coordinates And Vice Versa
Convert to rectangular coordinates
Just to double-check our answer, the point is in quadrant IV, so the x-coordinate is positive and the y-coordinate is negative.
We can convert by using the formula and
In this case, r is 3 and theta is -30
The coordinate is
Example Question #131 : Polar Coordinates And Complex Numbers
Convert the rectangular coordinates to polar form with an angle between and .
We must first recall that the polar coordinates of a point are expressed in the form , where is the radius (or the distance from the origin to the point) and is the angle formed between the positive x-axis to the radius.
The radius can be calculated using the distance formula.
Our first point is the origin and our second point is the one in question
Therefore, substituting gives us
Therefore, our radius is .
We can find our angle using the formula
Substituting the coordinates of our point gives
We can use our knowledge or a chart or calculator to determine that the angle that gives this tangent value is or . Since we want a postive angle less than , we need to go with the latter option.
Therefore, the polar coordinates of our point are
Example Question #132 : Polar Coordinates And Complex Numbers
Convert to polar coordinates.
Write the Cartesian to polar conversion formulas.
Substitute the coordinate point to the equations to solve for .
Ensuring that is located the first quadrant, the correct angle is zero.
Therefore, the answer is .
Example Question #132 : Polar Coordinates And Complex Numbers
Convert the following rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates:
To convert from rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates :
Using the rectangular coordinates given by the question,
The polar coordinates are
Example Question #14 : Convert Rectangular Coordinates To Polar Coordinates And Vice Versa
Convert the rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates:
To convert from rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates :
Using the rectangular coordinates given by the question,
The polar coordinates are
Example Question #17 : Convert Rectangular Coordinates To Polar Coordinates And Vice Versa
Convert the rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates:
To convert from rectangular coordinates to polar coordinates :
Using the rectangular coordinates given by the question,
The polar coordinates are
Example Question #141 : Polar Coordinates And Complex Numbers
How could you express in polar coordinates?
These rectangular coordinates form a right triangle whose side adjacent to the angle is 7.5, and whose opposite side is 4. This means we can find the angle using tangent:
This would be the angle if these coordinates were in the first quadrant. Since both x and y are negative, this point is in the third. We can adjust the angle by adding , giving us .
Now we just need to find the radius - this will be the hypotenuse of the triangle:
take the square root of both sides
So, our polar coordinates are
Example Question #141 : Polar Coordinates And Complex Numbers
Which coordinates would not describe a point at ?
Plotting the point listed gives this triangle:
Using Pythagorean Theorem or just knowing that this is a Pythagorean Triple, we get that the hypotenuse/ radius in polar coordinates is 5.
To find that angle, we can use tangent:
That's the angle in quadrant I. This point is in quadrant IV, so we can figure out the angle by subtracting from :
We can also find the corresponding angle in quadrant II by subtracting from , and the corresponding angle in quadrant III by adding , giving us these angles:
The point originally converted to polar coordinates is , so we know that works.
If the radius is negative, we want the angle to be at 2.4981, so the point works.
Since our angle 5.6397 is exactly 0.6435 radians below the x-axis, the point will work.
Similarly, the negative version of 2.4981 would be -3.7851, so
works.
The one that does not work has a positive 5 radius and 0.6435 as the angle, which would be located in quadrant I.
Example Question #18 : Convert Rectangular Coordinates To Polar Coordinates And Vice Versa
Which polar coordinates conicide with the rectangular point ?
Since the x and y coordinates indicate the same distance, we know that the triangle formed has two angles measuring .
The ratio of the legs to the hypotenuse is always , so since the legs both have a distance of 6, the hypotenuse/ radius for our polar coordinates is .
Since the x-coordinate is negative but the y-coordinate is positive, this angle is located in the second quadrant.
, so our angle is .
This makes our coordinates
.
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