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A vector x $\in \mathbb{R}^3$ makes angles $a, b, c$ with the three axes. Using the dot product with standard basis vectors, show:

$\cos^2a + \cos^2b + \cos^2c = 1$

I wasn't sure how to start this one. Conceptually, I can see what was going on, but I would think to create a number of simultaneous equations using $a + b = \frac{\pi}{2}$ etc. I wasn't sure what to do with standard basis vectors.

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    Hint: There is an expression for the dot product which involves the cosine of the angle between the two vectors and which has a physical significance. Make **x** a unit vector. Use Pythagoras.2012-07-01

2 Answers 2

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HINT 1:

Recall that if $\vec{x} = x_a \hat{e}_a + x_b \hat{e}_b + x_c \hat{e}_c$ and $\vec{y} = y_a \hat{e}_a + y_b \hat{e}_b + y_c \hat{e}_c$, then $\vec{x} \cdot \vec{y} = x_a y_a + x_b y_b + x_c y_c = \Vert x \Vert_2 \Vert y \Vert_2 \cos(\theta_{xy})$ where $\theta_{xy}$ is the angle between the vectors $\vec{x}$ and $\vec{y}$.

HINT 2:

Look at the norm of the vector, which make angles $a,b,c$ with the three axes.

Move the cursor over the gray area for a complete answer.

Let the vector be $\vec{x} = x_a \hat{e}_a + x_b \hat{e}_b + x_c \hat{e}_c$. Note that $x_a = \vec{x} \cdot \hat{e}_a = \Vert x \Vert_2 \cos(a)$ $x_b = \vec{x} \cdot \hat{e}_b = \Vert x \Vert_2 \cos(b)$ $x_c = \vec{x} \cdot \hat{e}_c = \Vert x \Vert_2 \cos(c)$ Further, $\Vert x \Vert_2^2 = \vert x_a \vert^2 + \vert x_b \vert^2 + \vert x_c \vert^2.$ Hence, $\Vert x \Vert_2^2 = \Vert x \Vert_2^2 \cos^2(a) + \Vert x \Vert_2^2 \cos^2(b) + \Vert x \Vert_2^2 \cos^2(c)$ Canceling off $\Vert x \Vert_2^2$, we get $\cos^2(a) + \cos^2(b) + \cos^2(c) = 1$

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    To get full marks for this answer, you should also mention that $x$ can't be the zero vector (which doesn't make any angles with anything), so dividing through by $||x||^2$ is legitimate.2019-01-21
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Let be the position vector $\vec{D}$ of the point D(A, B, C) and the angles a,b, c with the three axes. We have that: $\cos^2 a = \frac{{OA}^{2}}{{OD}^{2}};\cos^2 b = \frac{{OB}^{2}}{{OD}^{2}};\cos^2 c = \frac{{OC}^{2}}{{OD}^{2}} $.

$\cos^2a + \cos^2b + \cos^2c = \frac{{OA}^{2}+{OB}^{2}+{OC}^{2}}{{OD}^{2}}=\frac{{OD}^{2}}{{OD}^{2}}=1.$

Q.E.D.