Finding the angle between two vectors

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The discussion revolves around calculating the angle between two vectors given a force F and a displacement D. The user successfully calculated the work done by the force as 16 N but struggled to find the correct angle, initially arriving at 26 degrees while the textbook states it should be 36.9 degrees. They attempted to use the dot product formula but questioned their calculations. The magnitude of vector A was confirmed to be correct, indicating that the issue lies in the angle calculation. The conversation emphasizes the importance of using the dot product method accurately to determine the angle between vectors.
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Homework Statement



A force F =( 6 i - 2 j ) N acts on a particle that under
goes a displacement D r = ( 3 i + j )m. Find (a) the work done
by the force on the particle and (b) the angle between F
and D r .



Homework Equations



I've found the work to be about 16N. My problem is finding the angle.

The equation thebook gives is cos(inv)* (Products of vectors A and B) / (A)(i^2+j^2)*(B)(i^2+j^2)

The Attempt at a Solution



I used cas(inv)*((VectorA * VectorB) / sqrt(6^2-2^2)(3^2+1^2))

Which came out to 26 degrees. The back of the book says 36.9 degrees for the answer. I don't think I'm missing anything. All your help is appreciated. Thank you.
 
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The easiest way that i can think of to find the angle between two vectors is the dot product.

Remember \vec{A}\cdot\vec{B}=|A||B|Cos(\theta)
 
MetalManuel said:
The easiest way that i can think of to find the angle between two vectors is the dot product.

Remember \vec{A}\cdot\vec{B}=|A||B|Cos(\theta)

That's what I used, but I still got 26.5 degrees instead of the 36.9.

I got part a correct (finding the Force on the object) so I don't think I did any previous calculations incorrectly for the numbers I'm using now.
 
The magnitude of vector A is √( 62 + (-2)2 ) = √( 36 + 4 ) .
 
Holy crap.. thank you.
 
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