Essential Concepts
- The cross product u×v of two vectors u=⟨u1,u2,u3⟩ and v=⟨v1,v2,v3⟩ is a vector orthogonal to both u and v. Its length is given by ∥u×v∥=∥u∥⋅∥v∥⋅sinθ, where θ is the angle between u and v. Its direction is given by the right-hand rule.
- The algebraic formula for calculating the cross product of two vectors, u=⟨u1,u2,u3⟩ and v=⟨v1,v2,v3⟩, is u×v=(u2v3−u3v2)i−(u1v3−u3v1)j+(u1v2−u2v1)k.
- The cross product satisfies the following properties for vectors u, v, and w, and scalar c:
- u×v=−(v×u)
- u×(v+w)=u×v+u×w
- c(u×v)=(cu)×v=u×(cv)
- u×0=0×u=0
- v×v=0
- u⋅(v×w)=(u×v)⋅w
- The cross product of vectors u=⟨u1,u2,u3⟩ and v=⟨v1,v2,v3⟩ is the determinant |ijku1u2u3v1v2v3|
- If vectors u and v form adjacent sides of a parallelogram, then the area of the parallelogram is given by ∥u×v∥.
- The triple scalar product of vectors u, v, and w is u⋅(v×w).
- The volume of a parallelepiped with adjacent edges given by vectors u, v, and w is V=|u⋅(v×w)|
- If the triple scalar product of vectors u, v, and w is zero, then the vectors are coplanar. The converse is also true: If the vectors are coplanar, then their triple scalar product is zero.
- The cross product can be used to identify a vector orthogonal to two given vectors or to a plane.
- Torque τ measures the tendency of a force to produce rotation about an axis of rotation. If force F is acting at a distance r from the axis, then torque is equal to the cross product of r and F: τ=r×F.
Key Equations
- The cross product of two vectors in terms of the unit vectors
u×v=(u2v3−u3v2)i−(u1v3−u3v1)j+(u1v2−u2v1)k
Glossary
- cross product
- u×v=(u2v3−u3v2)i−(u1v3−u3v1)j+(u1v2−u2v1)k, where u=⟨u1,u2,u3⟩ and v=⟨v1,v2,v3⟩
- determinant
- a real number associated with a square matrix
- parallelpiped
- a three-dimensional prism with six faces that are parallelograms
- torque
- the effect of a force that causes an object to rotate
- triple scalar product
- the dot product of a vector with the cross product of two other vectors: u⋅(v×w)
- vector product
- the cross product of two vectors
Candela Citations
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- Calculus Volume 3. Authored by: Gilbert Strang, Edwin (Jed) Herman. Provided by: OpenStax. Located at: https://openstax.org/books/calculus-volume-3/pages/1-introduction. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike. License Terms: Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/calculus-volume-3/pages/1-introduction