A column vector
A position vector represents a point in space, with respect to the origin. The position vector for the coordinate
The magnitude of a column vector
Given a position vector
Where
Two vector equations represent the same line if:
Therefore, there are different vector equations for the same line. For example, all of these represent the same line (with different values of parameter
In two dimensions, a Cartesian equation of a line can be written as:
For the vector equation of a line, the direction vector
To change between a vector and Cartesian equation, the "point slope" form of the equation can be used (where
Alternatively, using the fact that the position vector
Which can then be rearranged into the desired form.
In general, to find the Cartesian equation given the vector equation:
Where all of the direction vector components are not 0:
In some cases, where one (or more) of the direction vector components is 0 (e.g.
If that didn't make much sense, imagine a 2D line
In a (2D) plane, two different straight lines either intersect, or are parallel (left). However, in 3D, two lines can be not parallel and also never intersect. These are called skew lines (right).
When two lines intersect, there are values of
To find the intersection between two lines (in the vector form):
Similarly, to show that two lines do not intersect, show that any value of
The dot (scalar) product is one way to multiply vectors. The motivation behind the dot product is to multiply two vectors to get a scalar result.
The diagram below shows two lines with angle
The dot product is defined as:
The
Another way to define
Thus, to find the angle between two vectors, we can use both definitions:
For two lines with vector equations, the angle between the two lines is equal to the angle between the direction vectors. This can be found even if the two lines do not intersect.
The dot product can be used to test if two vectors are perpendicular, as the
Given two vectors, the cross product (vector product)
The definition of the cross product for
This is given in the formula booklet. An application is the cross product of the base vectors, e.g.
Alternatively, the cross product can be worked out using the determinant of a 3x3 matrix:
The cross product can be used to find the inverse of a 3x3 matrix, by finding the cross products of columns of