Lesson 148: Velocity and Acceleration as Vector Derivatives

Position Vectors

In 3D space, the position of a particle is a vector \(\vec{r}(t) = \langle x(t), y(t), z(t) \rangle\). Its movement is described by the derivatives of this vector:

Worked Examples

Example 1: Circular Motion

A particle moves along \(\vec{r}(t) = \langle \cos t, \sin t, 0 \rangle\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In Quantum Mechanics, we don't track the position vector \(\vec{r}(t)\) of a particle. Instead, we track the "Expected Position" \(\langle \vec{r} \rangle\). According to Ehrenfest's Theorem, the derivative of the expected position is the expected momentum: \(\frac{d}{dt}\langle \vec{r} \rangle = \frac{\langle \vec{p} \rangle}{m}\). This ensures that while individual measurements are probabilistic, the average behavior of a quantum particle perfectly matches the vector calculus of classical mechanics.