Asked by mando
                Find a unit tangent vector to r(t)=e^(2t)i+e^(-1)j+(t^2+4)k at (1,1,4).
            
            
        Answers
                    Answered by
            Steve
            
    To get the point (1,1,4) it appears there's an error. t=0 produces (1,1/e,4) as written. Is the coefficient of <b>j</b> e^(-t)?
    
                    Answered by
            mando
            
    oh yes it is.
    
                    Answered by
            mando
            
    r(t)=e^(2t)i+e^(-t)j+(t^2+4)k at (1,1,4)
    
                    Answered by
            Steve
            
    Cool. Now just differentiate term by term:
r'(t) = 2e^(2t)<b>i</b> - e^(-t)<b>j</b> + 2t<b>k</b>
r'(1) = 2e²<b>i</b> - 1/e<b>j</b> + 2<b>k</b>
∥r'∥ = √(4e^4 + 1 + 4)
So, the unit vector at (1,1,4) = 1/√(4e^4 + 1 + 4) 2e²<b>i</b> - 1/e<b>j</b> + 2<b>k</b>
    
r'(t) = 2e^(2t)<b>i</b> - e^(-t)<b>j</b> + 2t<b>k</b>
r'(1) = 2e²<b>i</b> - 1/e<b>j</b> + 2<b>k</b>
∥r'∥ = √(4e^4 + 1 + 4)
So, the unit vector at (1,1,4) = 1/√(4e^4 + 1 + 4) 2e²<b>i</b> - 1/e<b>j</b> + 2<b>k</b>
                    Answered by
            Steve
            
    Rats. t=0
r'(0) = (2e²,-1,4)
you take it from there.
    
r'(0) = (2e²,-1,4)
you take it from there.
                    Answered by
            Steve
            
    RATS!
r'(0) = (2,-1,0)
unit vector = 1/√5 (2,-1,0)
    
r'(0) = (2,-1,0)
unit vector = 1/√5 (2,-1,0)
                    Answered by
            mando
            
    how does 1/e equal to 1?  ∥r'∥ = √(4e^4 + 1 + 4) 
    
                    Answered by
            mando
            
    oh ok, now i get it.
    
                                                    There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
                                            
                Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.