Mark's Calc III - Individual question feedhttp://calc3.askbot.com/questions/Open source question and answer forum written in Python and DjangoenCopyright Askbot, 2010-2011.Wed, 02 Jul 2014 14:33:18 -0500Showing perpendicularity at every point?http://calc3.askbot.com/question/56/showing-perpendicularity-at-every-point/This is from a few days ago, but I am curious how one would prove this. Exercise 13.2.8 reads: > Suppose that $\left|\textbf{r}(t) \right| = k$, for some constant $k$. This means that $ \textbf{r} $ describes some path on the sphere of radius $k$ with center at the origin. Show that $ \textbf{r} $ is perpendicular to $\textbf{r}'$ at every point. Hint: Use Theorem 13.2.5, part (d). Theorem 13.2.5 part (d) states: > $$\frac{d}{dt} (\textbf{r}(t) \cdot \textbf{s}(t)) = \textbf{r}'(t) \cdot \textbf{s}(t) + \textbf{r}(t) \cdot \textbf{s}'(t) $$ I'm just not sure where to begin. If someone could give me a starting point, I would really appreciate it! JustinWed, 02 Jul 2014 14:33:18 -0500http://calc3.askbot.com/question/56/