Vector-Valued Functions in AP Calculus BC: From Curves to Motion

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25 Terms

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Vector-valued function

A function whose output is a vector (e.g., ⟨x(t), y(t)⟩ or ⟨x(t), y(t), z(t)⟩), often used to represent a particle’s position in 2D/3D over time.

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Parameter (t)

An input variable (often time) that drives the component functions in a parametric/vector description of a curve.

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Component functions

The scalar functions x(t), y(t), and z(t) that make up a vector-valued function r(t)=⟨x(t), y(t), z(t)⟩.

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Position vector

The vector r(t) from the origin to the point (x(t), y(t)) or (x(t), y(t), z(t)) at time/parameter t.

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Parametric equations

A way to describe a curve by giving coordinates as functions of a parameter: x=x(t), y=y(t) (and possibly z=z(t)).

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Vector form of a parametric curve

Writing parametric equations as a single vector function, e.g., r(t)=⟨x(t), y(t)⟩, representing the same geometric path.

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Vertical line test (limitation)

A test for whether a curve is a function y=f(x); many paths (like circles) fail it but can still be represented parametrically.

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Componentwise limit (vector-valued)

A vector limit computed by taking limits of each component: lim_{t→a} r(t)=⟨lim x(t), lim y(t)⟩ (and similarly in 3D).

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Continuity of a vector-valued function

r(t) is continuous at t=a if each component function is continuous at t=a; any component discontinuity makes r(t) discontinuous.

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Differentiating vector-valued functions (componentwise rule)

To differentiate r(t)=⟨x(t), y(t), z(t)⟩, differentiate each component: r′(t)=⟨x′(t), y′(t), z′(t)⟩.

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Derivative notation for vector-valued functions

Common ways to write the derivative include r′(t) and d r/dt, meaning the rate of change of the vector with respect to t.

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Tangent (direction) vector

For a position function r(t), the derivative r′(t) points in the instantaneous direction of motion along the curve and is tangent to the path.

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Parametric slope formula (dy/dx)

For x=x(t), y=y(t), the slope in the xy-plane is dy/dx = (dy/dt)/(dx/dt), provided dx/dt ≠ 0.

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Velocity vector

In motion problems, v(t)=r′(t); it gives both the instantaneous speed and direction of motion.

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Acceleration vector

a(t)=v′(t)=r″(t); it describes how velocity changes over time (in magnitude and/or direction).

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Speed

A scalar equal to the magnitude of velocity: |v(t)| (not the velocity vector itself).

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Magnitude of velocity in 2D

If v(t)=⟨x′(t), y′(t)⟩, then |v(t)| = sqrt((x′(t))^2 + (y′(t))^2).

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Magnitude of velocity in 3D

If v(t)=⟨x′(t), y′(t), z′(t)⟩, then |v(t)| = sqrt((x′(t))^2 + (y′(t))^2 + (z′(t))^2).

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Displacement

The change in position from t=a to t=b: r(b) − r(a) (a vector).

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Distance traveled (total path length)

The total length of the path from t=a to t=b: ∫_a^b |v(t)| dt (a scalar).

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Recovering position from velocity

If v(t)=r′(t), then r(t) can be found by integrating componentwise: r(t)=∫ v(t) dt, then using an initial condition to find constants.

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Initial condition (position)

A given value like r(t0)=⟨x0, y0⟩ used to determine constants of integration when finding r(t) from v(t).

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Constants of integration (vector case)

When integrating a vector-valued function, each component may require its own constant (e.g., C1, C2, C3).

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Common derivative misconception: |r(t)| vs |v(t)|

|r(t)| is distance from the origin, not speed; speed is |v(t)|, the magnitude of the velocity vector.

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Common derivative misconception: d/dt(|r(t)|) vs |r′(t)|

In general, d/dt(|r(t)|) ≠ |r′(t)| because the left is a derivative of a scalar magnitude, while the right is the magnitude of a derivative vector.

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