
 Originally Posted by 
salsabil
					 
				 
				a boat needs to travel south at a speed of 20kmh-1 however a constant current of 6kmh-1 is flowing from the south-east use vector subtraction to find the equvilant speed in still water for the boat to achieve the actual speed of 20kmh-1 and find the direction in which the boat must head compensate for the current
			
		 
	 
 I will use the component method.  Picture south going from left to right on your monitor.  Against a current of 6 km/h from the south east, the boat needs to head slightly to the east of south and travel faster than 20 km/h.  The vector representing that heading will intersect the tail of the southeasterly vector whose head joins the head of the vector going south at 20 km/h.  The magnitude of the heading vector equals the square root of [20 + 6*cos(pi/4)]^2 + [6*sin(pi/4)]^2 which is 24.611 km/h.  The sin of the angle of southeasterly heading is 
6*sin(pi/4)/24.611 which corresponds to an angle of about 9.93 degrees east of south.  6*cos(pi/4) is the x component of the extension of the southern resultant vector and 6*sin(pi/4) is the eastern component of the heading vector.  This is the best I can do without a diagram.