IB Maths AA HL Topic 3 โ€” Geometry & Trigonometry Paper 1 & 2 ~6 min read HL only

Parallel Vectors

Two vectors are parallel if one is a scalar multiple of the other โ€” same line of direction, possibly different length, possibly opposite. The condition a = kb (for some non-zero scalar k) shows up everywhere in vector geometry, from finding unknowns to proving three points lie on a line.

๐Ÿ“˜ What you need to know

The parallel test

Parallel condition a โˆฅ b  โŸบ  a = kb  for some scalar k โ‰  0

In components, a = (aโ‚, aโ‚‚, aโ‚ƒ) is parallel to b = (bโ‚, bโ‚‚, bโ‚ƒ) when

aโ‚bโ‚ = aโ‚‚bโ‚‚ = aโ‚ƒbโ‚ƒ = k
Same ratio across all three components = parallel. Different ratios anywhere = not parallel.

Same direction or opposite?

Positive k
a = +kb
same direction; just rescaled
Negative k
a = โˆ’kb
opposite direction; still parallel
“Parallel” in vector maths includes the anti-parallel case โ€” both a = 2b and a = โˆ’2b count as parallel. Direction is along the same line either way.

๐Ÿงญ Recipe โ€” show two vectors are parallel and find the scalar

  1. Write both in the same form (column or base vector).
  2. Divide each component of one by the corresponding component of the other.
  3. If all the ratios match โ†’ they’re parallel; the common ratio is the scalar k.
  4. If the ratios differ โ†’ not parallel.
  5. For unknowns: set up a = kb, equate components, and solve.

Worked examples

WE 1

Show two vectors are parallel + find the scalar

Show that a = 3โˆ’12 and b = โˆ’9i + 3j โˆ’ 6k are parallel, and find the scalar k such that b = ka.

Step 1: Write both as columns a = (3, โˆ’1, 2); b = (โˆ’9, 3, โˆ’6) Step 2: Divide each component of b by a โˆ’9/3 = โˆ’3; 3/โˆ’1 = โˆ’3; โˆ’6/2 = โˆ’3 Step 3: All ratios equal โ†’ parallel; k = โˆ’3 b = โˆ’3a, so k = โˆ’3 negative k means opposite direction โ€” still parallel
WE 2

Find unknown for parallel

Given that a = (4, p, โˆ’6) is parallel to b = (โˆ’2, 3, 3), find the value of p.

Parallel โ†’ a = kb, with same k for every component Step 1: Find k using known components x: 4 = k(โˆ’2) โ†’ k = โˆ’2 z-check: โˆ’6 = k(3) = (โˆ’2)(3) = โˆ’6 โœ“ Step 2: Apply k to the y-component p = k(3) = (โˆ’2)(3) p = โˆ’6
WE 3

Determine if two vectors are parallel

Determine whether a = 2i + 5j โˆ’ 3k and b = โˆ’4i โˆ’ 10j + 9k are parallel.

Step 1: Compute component ratios b/a โˆ’4/2 = โˆ’2;   โˆ’10/5 = โˆ’2;   9/โˆ’3 = โˆ’3 Step 2: Ratios disagree (โˆ’2 โ‰  โˆ’3) NOT parallel need the SAME scalar across every component โ€” one mismatch is enough to fail
WE 4

Factorise to spot parallel

Show that c = 12i โˆ’ 8j + 4k and d = โˆ’15i + 10j โˆ’ 5k are parallel by factorising.

Step 1: Take out a common factor from each c = 4(3i โˆ’ 2j + k) d = โˆ’5(3i โˆ’ 2j + k) Step 2: Both are scalar multiples of the SAME vector โ†’ parallel Step 3: Find k where d = kยทc d = โˆ’5(3i โˆ’ 2j + k) = (โˆ’5/4) ร— 4(3i โˆ’ 2j + k) = (โˆ’5/4) c d = โˆ’54 c factorising reveals the shared “direction vector” โ€” useful for spotting parallels quickly
WE 5

Find a parameter for parallel

Given that a = ti โˆ’ 6j + 2tk and b = 4i โˆ’ 3j + tk are parallel, find the value of t.

Step 1: Set a = kb and equate components x: t = 4k y: โˆ’6 = โˆ’3k โ†’ k = 2 z: 2t = tk Step 2: Use k = 2 in the x-equation t = 4(2) = 8 Step 3: Check z: 2t = tk โ†’ 16 = 8(2) = 16 โœ“ t = 8 always check all three components agree on the same k
WE 6

Show three points are collinear

The points A(1, 2, โˆ’1), B(3, 5, 0), and C(7, 11, 2) are given. Show that A, B, and C are collinear.

Step 1: Compute the displacement vectors AB and BC AB = B โˆ’ A = (3โˆ’1, 5โˆ’2, 0โˆ’(โˆ’1)) = (2, 3, 1) BC = C โˆ’ B = (7โˆ’3, 11โˆ’5, 2โˆ’0) = (4, 6, 2) Step 2: Check ratios 4/2 = 2; 6/3 = 2; 2/1 = 2 Step 3: BC = 2 AB โ†’ AB and BC are parallel and share point B A, B, C are collinear collinear = on the same line. Parallel displacements + a shared point seals it.

๐Ÿ’ก Top tips

โš  Common mistakes

Next note: Adding & Subtracting Vectors. The basic rule (add corresponding components), the geometric meaning (nose-to-tail), and the link between sum vectors and the parallelogram law.

Need help with Parallel Vectors?

Get 1-on-1 help from an IB examiner who knows exactly what Paper 1 & 2 are looking for.

Book Free Session โ†’