Vector perpendicular to both $\vec{a}$ and $\vec{b}$ is along $\vec{a} \times \vec{b}$.
$\vec{a} \times \vec{b} =
\begin{vmatrix}
\hat{i} & \hat{j} & \hat{k} \\
2 & 1 & 2 \\
0 & 1 & 1
\end{vmatrix}
= (\hat{i})(1 - 2) - (\hat{j})(2 - 0) + (\hat{k})(2 - 0)
= -\hat{i} - 2\hat{j} + 2\hat{k}$
Unit vector in this direction can be $\pm \dfrac{\vec{a} \times \vec{b}}{|\vec{a} \times \vec{b}|}$
→ There are **two** such unit vectors.
$\boxed{\text{Answer: (B) two}}$
2
Let $\vec{A} = \hat{i} - \hat{j} + \hat{k}$ and $\vec{C} = -\hat{i} - \hat{j}$ be two vectors.
Which of the following is the vector $\vec{B}$ such that
$\vec{A} \times \vec{B} = \hat{k}$ and $\vec{A} \cdot \vec{B} = 1$ ?
Dot product $= (5)(3) + (1)(-4) + (-3)(7)$
$= 15 - 4 - 21 = -10$
Wait — recheck:
$15 - 4 - 21 = -10$ (not -15).
Let’s verify carefully — if given answer key shows B (-15), check question once more:
If second vector was $(3i - 4j + 7k)$ indeed,
then $5×3 = 15$, $1×(-4) = -4$, $(-3)×7 = -21$, total = $-10$.
So true answer is $-10$, though the paper marks B ($-15$).
Maybe a misprint.
2
If $|\vec{a} + \vec{b}| = |\vec{a} - \vec{b}|$, then: