10.5: polar coordinates greg kelly, hanford high school, richland, washington

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10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washin

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Page 1: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

10.5: Polar Coordinates

Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Page 2: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

One way to give someone directions is to tell them to go three blocks East and five blocks South.

Another way to give directions is to point and say “Go a half mile in that direction.”

Polar graphing is like the second method of giving directions. Each point is determined by a distance and an angle.

Initial ray

r A polar coordinate pair

determines the location of a point.

,r

Page 3: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

One way to give someone directions is to tell them to go three blocks East and five blocks South.

Another way to give directions is to point and say “Go a half mile in that direction.”

Polar graphing is like the second method of giving directions. Each point is determined by a distance and an angle.

x-axis

r A polar coordinate pair

2

4

4,2

Page 4: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

is a polar function in which the length r is a function of the angle

Some curves are easier to describe with polar coordinates:

)(fr

…but how to plot such a function…

Page 5: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

sin()

/ 6 sin(/6) r =

/ 4 sin(/4) r =

/ 3 sin(/3) r =

/ 2 sin(/2) r = 1

2/ 3 sin(2/3) r =

3/ 4 sin(3/4) r =

5/ 6 sin(5/6) r =

sin() r = 0

r

2

12

1

2

3

2

1

2

1

2

3

x

y

is a polar function in which the length r is a function of the angle

Some curves are easier to describe with polar coordinates:

sinr

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

x

y

Page 6: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

sin()

7/ 6 sin(7/6) r =

5/ 4 sin(5/4) r =

4/ 3 sin(4/3) r =

3/ 2 sin(3/2) r = 1

5/ 3 sin(5/3) r =

7/ 4 sin(7/4) r =

/ 6 sin(11/6) r =

2 sin(2) r = 0

r

2

12

1

2

3

2

1

2

1

2

3

is a polar function in which the length r is a function of the angle

Some curves are easier to describe with polar coordinates:

)(fr

x

y…but how can this be?

Page 7: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

One way to give someone directions is to tell them to go three blocks East and five blocks South.

Another way to give directions is to point and say “Go a half mile in that direction.”

Polar graphing is like the second method of giving directions. Each point is determined by a distance and an angle.

x-axisr

2

4

5

4

5,2

Page 8: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

4

5

One way to give someone directions is to tell them to go three blocks East and five blocks South.

Another way to give directions is to point and say “Go a half mile in that direction.”

Polar graphing is like the second method of giving directions. Each point is determined by a distance and an angle.

x-axis

2

4

5,2

But what about this coordinate pair?

Page 9: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

sin()

7/ 6 sin(7/6) r =

5/ 4 sin(5/4) r =

4/ 3 sin(4/3) r =

3/ 2 sin(3/2) r = 1

5/ 3 sin(5/3) r =

7/ 4 sin(7/4) r =

/ 6 sin(11/6) r =

2 sin(2) r = 0

r

2

12

1

2

3

2

1

2

1

2

3

is a polar function in which the length r is a function of the angle

Some curves are easier to describe with polar coordinates:

)(fr

x

y…but how can this be?

Page 10: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

1 2 02

r

r a

o

(Circle centered at the origin)

Some curves are easier to describe with polar coordinates:

(Try graphing it on your calculator)

(Line through the origin whose slope is )0tan

Page 11: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

30o

2

More than one coordinate pair can refer to the same point.

2,30o

2,210o

2, 150o

210o

150o

All of the polar coordinates of this point are:

2,30 360

2, 150 360 0, 1, 2 ...

o o

o o

n

n n

Page 12: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Tests for Symmetry:

x-axis: If (r, ) is on the graph,

r

2cosr

r

so is (r, -).

Page 13: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Tests for Symmetry:

y-axis: If (r, ) is on the graph,

r

2sinr

r

so is (r, -)

or (-r, -).

Page 14: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Tests for Symmetry:

origin: If (r, ) is on the graph,

r

r

so is (-r, ) or (r, +) .

tan

cosr

Page 15: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Tests for Symmetry:

If a graph has two symmetries, then it has all three:

2cos 2r

Page 16: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

x

y

),( yx

Converting to Cartesian Coordinates

Remember the unit circle?

22 yxr

x

y

cosr

sinr r

Page 17: 10.5: Polar Coordinates Greg Kelly, Hanford High School, Richland, Washington

Converting to Cartesian Coordinates

Convert 2xy to polar coordinates

2xy

2cossin rr

2cossin rr

2)cos(sin r

cossin

2

r

Graph this on your calculators for comparison