Would you do a table of values for most ugly 3d vector graphs like these, cause I can't really find another efficent way to go about it. I just feel like in the exam a table of values would take way to long to do accurately
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yeah thats an option. but slightly more efficient way:
- consider just the xy plane (basically ignore the z for now)
- figure out what is being traced out, usually it is a circle or a line-> find the direction of what's being traced out (anticlockwise/clockwise/intercepts as well for line, keep the radius/intercepts in mind)
- now just look at the z, figure out what will happen there
- if it's sine or cosine then the graph is going to oscillate up and down in z value (duh, also in this case it's very likely that one of x/y is of the form y/x=t), otherwise if it's a line (of the formz =t) then you know the graph is going to be centered around the z-axis (provided x and y are cos and sin)
in summary, what we figured out is this (for the most typical cases u will be presented with in hsc):
- z = t form +x/y=sin/cos means a helix/spiral shape, centered around the z-axis (if they're mean it might be shifted)\
- z =sin/cos form + one of x/y in t form and the other is sin/cos means a helix/spiral shape centered around whatever axis has the t form
- z,x,y all in t form means it will be a line, in this case just solving for the parametric vector equation will be easiest
-z,x,y all in sin/cos form means a weird circle shape will be traced out, kind of on an angle usually (in this case, it's usually worthwhile to do a table of values coz things will be periodic, however this is also the one case they prob won't give u)
honestly in hsc its unlikely they will ask u to graph these, it's more a multiple choice thing, so in the rare instance they do then table of values always works to figure out what's happening. internals is obv a different story though