Polar Coordinates | Lecture 24 | Vector Calculus for Engineers (V1)

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  • Опубліковано 21 лип 2024
  • A description of polar coordinates, and how to write the Cartesian derivatives in terms of the polar coordinate variables.
    Join me on Coursera: imp.i384100.net/mathematics-f...
    Lecture notes at www.math.ust.hk/~machas/vector...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @ProfJeffreyChasnov
    @ProfJeffreyChasnov  4 роки тому +1

    Find other Vector Calculus videos in my playlist ua-cam.com/play/PLkZjai-2JcxnYmkg6fpzz4WFumGVl7MOa.html

  • @mixchapter
    @mixchapter 4 роки тому

    Thanks sir you have really help me. I am studying telecommunication engineering and as part of the course am studying electromagnetic wave theory .and your teaching has and continually to help me. Thanks am very great full

  • @mdtauseefibrahim323
    @mdtauseefibrahim323 4 роки тому

    Please continue.Great work.

  • @ivanwille4310
    @ivanwille4310 Рік тому

    Brilliant explanation!

  • @diegolarraguibel7753
    @diegolarraguibel7753 3 роки тому

    you really explain yourself so well! thank you so much

  • @markkennedy9767
    @markkennedy9767 Рік тому

    Hi, can you explain why the position vector can never be described as a linear combination of r hat and theta hat whereas the velocity and acceleration vectors derived from the position vector are described in terms of a linear combination of r hat and theta hat. Indeed it seems velocity and acceleration vectors at each position are uniquely suited to this coordinate system since they are true vectors unlike the position vector (which starts at the origin and therefore only has an r hat component). This difference (between position vectors and their velocity/acceleration counterparts) seems to extend to the ability to take dot products in this coordinate system as well: dot products don't work for position vectors. Can you shed light on what all this means. Is there a deeper physical significance associated with this difference in the treatment of vectors which doesn't happen for the Cartesian coordinate system. I heard reference to velocity and acceleration being true vectors in the tangent spaces of each point etc and this fits well with a changing basis at each point (as with this coordinate system). I hope you can shed light on this.

  • @bensonkwok951
    @bensonkwok951 2 роки тому +1

    How can we write i hat and j hat in terms or r hat and theta hat?

    • @Ashutosh-qb4ku
      @Ashutosh-qb4ku 2 роки тому

      Write r hat and theta hat in terms of i hat and j hat in matrix form. Now you will get the answer by inverting the matrix.

  • @markkennedy9767
    @markkennedy9767 4 місяці тому

    If we use a polar coordinate system whose origin is either 1) moving with uniform velocity or 2) accelerating or 3) itself moving around another fixed point, can we use Newton's second law in the r hat and theta hat directions.
    I suspect we can still do so in case 1) but not if it's accelerating in 2) and 3).
    If not, how would we deal with such a system with an accelerating origin: I'm thinking something like a spinning ride which is itself on a spinning carousel.
    Hopefully you can comment on this.
    Thanks.

    • @ProfJeffreyChasnov
      @ProfJeffreyChasnov  4 місяці тому

      You need to derive the appropriate Newton's equations for an accelerating reference frame. You can find these equations in classical mechanics textbooks.

    • @markkennedy9767
      @markkennedy9767 4 місяці тому

      @@ProfJeffreyChasnov
      Thanks for your reply.
      Yes but we're not talking about simple LINEAR motion in an accelerating (non-inertial) reference frame, which is what you'll find in the typical mechanics text. That would be trivial enough.
      I'm talking about a ROTATING object in such an accelerating reference frame (so the frame itself can also be rotating or just accelerating linearly).
      Clearly, it's not as simple as the correction one would apply for an object in linear motion in such an accelerating (e.g. rotating) frame.
      Unless you're saying that all we do is add the components of acceleration ä of the origin of the accelerating frame to the r hat and theta hat components of the object's acceleration in that frame to get that object's acceleration in an inertial frame.
      If you are, surely this isn't trivial, is it? For example take a spinning object B (with its own r hat and theta hat acceleration components) in the frame of another spinning object A (whose centre, for the sake of argument is fixed). So the r hat and theta hat components of acceleration of the CENTRE of spinning object B would first have be obtained (using a polar coordinate system whose origin is the centre of object A). Then we would have to get the r hat and theta hat components of object B using a polar coordinate system whose origin this time is the centre of spinning object B.
      Are you saying the respective r hat and theta hat components of objects A and B can just be added together then. Surely that can't be the case. From what I understand, we can't add components "across" two polar coordinate systems (with different origins) like this, can we?
      Maybe you're not saying this at all, sorry.🙂
      If not, can you say how one would proceed in this case.
      Cheers.

    • @markkennedy9767
      @markkennedy9767 4 місяці тому

      ​​@@ProfJeffreyChasnov
      Hi I was wondering if you had any ideas about the scenario I describe in the post above.
      Thanks.

    • @markkennedy9767
      @markkennedy9767 3 місяці тому

      ​@@ProfJeffreyChasnov
      I was really hoping you could give advice on this particular scenario. Pity it's gone unanswered. 😕

  • @paulhetherington3854
    @paulhetherington3854 7 місяців тому

    You cannot - use any vector - for energy payload!

  • @randomthings8376
    @randomthings8376 3 роки тому

    thanks megamind