Which equation is the polar equivalent to the equation y=−(√3/3)x?

θ=π/6

θ=π/3

θ=2π/3

θ=5π/6

To find the polar equivalent of the equation y=−(√3/3)x, we can use the conversion formulas:

r = √(x^2 + y^2)

θ = arctan(y/x)

Substituting the given equation y = - (√3/3)x, we can find the values of r and θ.

First, let's rearrange the equation to solve for x:

y = - (√3/3)x

x = - (√3/3)y

Now, we substitute x and y values into the formulas:

r = √((- (√3/3)y)^2 + y^2)

r = √(3y^2/9 + y^2)

r = √(4y^2/9)

r = (2/3)y

Next, we find the value of θ using the formula:

θ = arctan(y/x)

θ = arctan(y/(- (√3/3)y))

θ = arctan(-√3)

Now we need to compare the obtained value of θ with the given options.

θ=π/6

θ=π/3

θ=2π/3

θ=5π/6

Since none of the given options matches θ = arctan(-√3), there is no direct match for the polar equivalent of the equation y = - (√3/3)x.

To find the polar equivalent of the given equation, we need to convert it from Cartesian coordinates to polar coordinates.

The Cartesian equation y=−(√3/3)x represents a line with a negative slope of -√3/3.

In polar coordinates, the relationship between Cartesian coordinates (x, y) and polar coordinates (r, θ) is as follows:
x = r*cos(θ)
y = r*sin(θ)

We can substitute the given equation into the polar coordinate equations:
-(√3/3)x = r*cos(θ)
y = r*sin(θ)

Since y is already expressed as a function of x, we can substitute the value of y from the Cartesian equation:
y = r*sin(θ) = -(√3/3)x

Now, we can substitute the given value of θ (θ=π/6) into the equation to check which option is equivalent to the given equation.

1. Let's substitute θ=π/6 into the equation θ=π/6:
r*sin(π/6) = -(√3/3)*r*cos(π/6)
r*(1/2) = -(√3/3)*r*(√3/2)
1/2 = -3/6

The equation is not satisfied, so θ=π/6 is not the polar equivalent of the given equation.

2. Let's substitute θ=π/3 into the equation:
r*sin(π/3) = -(√3/3)*r*cos(π/3)
r*(√3/2) = -(√3/3)*r*(1/2)
√3/2 = -√3/6

The equation is not satisfied, so θ=π/3 is not the polar equivalent of the given equation.

3. Let's substitute θ=2π/3 into the equation:
r*sin(2π/3) = -(√3/3)*r*cos(2π/3)
r*(√3/2) = -(√3/3)*r*(-1/2)
√3/2 = √3/6

The equation is satisfied, so the polar equation θ=2π/3 is equivalent to the given equation.

4. Let's substitute θ=5π/6 into the equation:
r*sin(5π/6) = -(√3/3)*r*cos(5π/6)
r*(-1/2) = -(√3/3)*r*(-√3/2)
-1/2 = 3/6

The equation is satisfied, so the polar equation θ=5π/6 is also equivalent to the given equation.

Therefore, the polar equivalent to the equation y=−(√3/3)x is θ=2π/3 and θ=5π/6.

well, tanθ = y/x = −1/√3