Vector algebra relations

The relations below apply to vectors in a three-dimensional Euclidean space.[1] Some, but not all of them, extend to vectors of higher dimensions. In particular, the cross product of two vectors is not available in all dimensions. See Seven-dimensional cross product.

Magnitudes

The magnitude of a vector A is determined by its three components along three orthogonal directions using Pythagoras' theorem:

The magnitude also can be expressed using the dot product:

Inequalities

; Cauchy–Schwarz inequality in three dimensions
; the triangle inequality in three dimensions
; the reverse triangle inequality

Here the notation (A·B) denotes the dot product of vectors A and B.

Angles

The vector product and the scalar product of two vectors define the angle between them, say θ:[1][2]

To satisfy the right-hand rule, for positive θ, vector B is counter-clockwise from A, and for negative θ it is clockwise.

Here the notation A×B denotes the vector cross product of vectors A and B. The Pythagorean trigonometric identity then provides:

If a vector A = (Ax, Ay, Az) makes angles α, β, γ with an orthogonal set of x-, y- and z-axes, then:

and analogously for angles β, γ. Consequently:

with unit vectors along the axis directions.

Areas and volumes

The area Σ of a parallelogram with sides A and B containing the angle θ is:

which will be recognized as the magnitude of the vector cross product of the vectors A and B lying along the sides of the parallelogram. That is:

The square of this expression is:[3]

where Γ(A, B) is the Gram determinant of A and B defined by:

In a similar fashion, the squared volume V of a parallelepiped spanned by the three vectors A, B and C is given by the Gram determinant of the three vectors:[3]

This process can be extended to n-dimensions.

Addition and multiplication of vectors

Some of the following algebraic relations refer to the dot product and the cross product of vectors. These relations can be found in a variety of sources, for example, see Albright.[1]

  • ; distributivity of multiplication by a scalar and addition
  • ; commutativity of addition
  • ; associativity of addition
  • ; commutativity of scalar (dot) product
  • ; anticommutativity of vector cross product
  • ; distributivity of addition wrt scalar product
  • ; distributivity of addition wrt vector cross product
; scalar triple product
In particular, when A = C and B = D, the above reduces to:
; Lagrange's identity in three dimensions
  • A vector quadruple product, which is also a vector, can be defined, which satisfies the following identities:[4][5]
where [A, B, C] is the scalar triple product A · (B × C) or the determinant of the matrix {A, B, C} with the components of these vectors as columns .
  • In 3 dimensions, given any three non-coplanar vectors A, B, C, any other vector D can be expressed in terms of these as:[6]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 See, for example, Lyle Frederick Albright (2008). "§2.5.1 Vector algebra". Albright's chemical engineering handbook. CRC Press. p. 68. ISBN 0-8247-5362-3.
  2. Francis Begnaud Hildebrand (1992). Methods of applied mathematics (Reprint of Prentice-Hall 1965 2nd ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 24. ISBN 0-486-67002-3.
  3. 1 2 Richard Courant, Fritz John (2000). "Areas of parallelograms and volumes of parallelepipeds in higher dimensions". Introduction to calculus and analysis, Volume II (Reprint of original 1974 Interscience ed.). Springer. pp. 190–195. ISBN 3-540-66569-2.
  4. Vidwan Singh Soni (2009). "§1.10.2 Vector quadruple product". Mechanics and relativity. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. pp. 11–12. ISBN 81-203-3713-1.
  5. This formula is applied to spherical trigonometry by Edwin Bidwell Wilson, Josiah Willard Gibbs (1901). "§42 in Direct and skew products of vectors". Vector analysis: a text-book for the use of students of mathematics. Scribner. pp. 77 ff.
  6. Joseph George Coffin (1911). Vector analysis: an introduction to vector-methods and their various applications to physics and mathematics (2nd ed.). Wiley. p. 56.
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