When it comes to perpendicular gradients, the key rule is that the gradients have a product of -1.
So, this means that if you know one gradient, the perpedicular gradient comes from changing the sign and inverting it - for example, a gradient of 2 is perpendicular to -1/2.
A couple more -
A gradient of -3 is perpendicular to a gradient of 1/3
A gradient of 2/3 is perpendicular to a gradient of -3/2
Still not sure? Take a look at this tutorial from Corbett Maths.
No comments:
Post a Comment