Dot product
In mathematics, the dot product or scalar product is an algebraic operation that takes two equal-length sequences of numbers and returns a single number. In Euclidean geometry, the dot product of the Cartesian coordinates of two vectors is widely used and often called "the" inner product of Euclidean space even though it is not the only inner product that can be defined on Euclidean space; see also inner product space.
Algebraically, the dot product is the sum of the products of the corresponding entries of the two sequences of numbers. Geometrically, it is the product of the Euclidean magnitudes of the two vectors and the cosine of the angle between them. These definitions are equivalent when using Cartesian coordinates. In modern geometry, Euclidean spaces are often defined by using vector spaces. In this case, the dot product is used for defining lengths and angles.
The name "dot product" is derived from the centered dot " · " that is often used to designate this operation; the alternative name "scalar product" emphasizes that the result is a scalar, rather than a vector, as is the case for the vector product in three-dimensional space.
Definition
The dot product may be defined algebraically or geometrically. The geometric definition is based on the notions of angle and distance. The equivalence of these two definitions relies on having a Cartesian coordinate system for Euclidean space.In modern presentations of Euclidean geometry, the points of space are defined in terms of their Cartesian coordinates, and Euclidean space itself is commonly identified with the real coordinate space Rn. In such a presentation, the notions of length and angles are defined by means of the dot product. The length of a vector is defined as the square root of the dot product of the vector by itself, and the cosine of the angle of two vectors of length one is defined as their dot product. So the equivalence of the two definitions of the dot product is a part of the equivalence of the classical and the modern formulations of Euclidean geometry.
Algebraic definition
The dot product of two vectors and is defined as:where Σ denotes summation and n is the dimension of the vector space. For instance, in three-dimensional space, the dot product of vectors and is:
If vectors are identified with row matrices, the dot product can also be written as a matrix product
where denotes the transpose of.
Expressing the above example in this way, a 1 × 3 matrix is multiplied by a 3 × 1 matrix to get a 1 × 1 matrix that is identified with its unique entry:
Geometric definition
In Euclidean space, a Euclidean vector is a geometric object that possesses both a magnitude and a direction. A vector can be pictured as an arrow. Its magnitude is its length, and its direction is the direction to which the arrow points. The magnitude of a vector a is denoted by. The dot product of two Euclidean vectors a and b is defined bywhere is the angle between and.
In particular, if the vectors and are orthogonal, then implies
At the other extreme, if they are codirectional, then the angle between them is zero and
This implies that the dot product of a vector a with itself is
which gives
the formula for the Euclidean length of the vector.
Scalar projection and first properties
The scalar projection of a Euclidean vector a in the direction of a Euclidean vector b is given bywhere is the angle between a and b.
In terms of the geometric definition of the dot product, this can be rewritten
where is the unit vector in the direction of b.
The dot product is thus characterized geometrically by
The dot product, defined in this manner, is homogeneous under scaling in each variable, meaning that for any scalar α,
It also satisfies a distributive law, meaning that
These properties may be summarized by saying that the dot product is a bilinear form. Moreover, this bilinear form is positive definite, which means that
is never negative and is zero if and only if, the zero vector.
Equivalence of the definitions
If e1,..., en are the standard basis vectors in Rn, then we may writeThe vectors ei are an orthonormal basis, which means that they have unit length and are at right angles to each other. Hence since these vectors have unit length
and since they form right angles with each other, if,
Thus in general we can say that:
Where δ ij is the Kronecker delta.
Also, by the geometric definition, for any vector ei and a vector a, we note
where ai is the component of vector a in the direction of ei. The last step in the equality can be seen from the figure.
Now applying the distributivity of the geometric version of the dot product gives
which is precisely the algebraic definition of the dot product. So the geometric dot product equals the algebraic dot product.
Properties
The dot product fulfills the following properties if a, b, and c are real vectors and r is a scalar.- Commutative:
- :
- : which follows from the definition :
- :
- Distributive over vector addition:
- :
- Bilinear:
- :
- Scalar multiplication:
- :
- Not associative because the dot product between a scalar and a vector is not defined, which means that the expressions involved in the associative property, ⋅ c or a ⋅ are both ill-defined. Note however that the previously mentioned scalar multiplication property is sometimes called the "associative law for scalar and dot product" or one can say that "the dot product is associative with respect to scalar multiplication" because c = ⋅ b = a ⋅.
- Orthogonal:
- : Two non-zero vectors a and b are orthogonal if and only if.
- No cancellation:
- : Unlike multiplication of ordinary numbers, where if, then b always equals c unless a is zero, the dot product does not obey the cancellation law:
- : If and, then we can write: by the distributive law; the result above says this just means that a is perpendicular to, which still allows, and therefore allows.
- Product Rule: If a and b are functions, then the derivative of is.
Application to the law of cosines
which is the law of cosines.
Triple product
There are two ternary operations involving dot product and cross product.The scalar triple product of three vectors is defined as
Its value is the determinant of the matrix whose columns are the Cartesian coordinates of the three vectors. It is the signed volume of the Parallelepiped defined by the three vectors.
The vector triple product is defined by
This identity, also known as Lagrange's formula may be remembered as "BAC minus CAB", keeping in mind which vectors are dotted together. This formula finds application in simplifying vector calculations in physics.
Physics
In physics, vector magnitude is a scalar in the physical sense, i.e. a physical quantity independent of the coordinate system, expressed as the product of a numerical value and a physical unit, not just a number. The dot product is also a scalar in this sense, given by the formula, independent of the coordinate system. Examples include:- Mechanical work is the dot product of force and displacement vectors,
- Power is the dot product of force and velocity.
Generalizations
Complex vectors
For vectors with complex entries, using the given definition of the dot product would lead to quite different properties. For instance the dot product of a vector with itself would be an arbitrary complex number, and could be zero without the vector being the zero vector ; this in turn would have consequences for notions like length and angle. Properties such as the positive-definite norm can be salvaged at the cost of giving up the symmetric and bilinear properties of the scalar product, through the alternative definitionwhere bi is the complex conjugate of bi. It can also be expressed in terms of the conjugate transpose :
where vectors were assumed represented as row vectors.
Then the scalar product of any vector with itself is a non-negative real number, and it is nonzero except for the zero vector. However this scalar product is thus sesquilinear rather than bilinear: it is conjugate linear and not linear in a, and the scalar product is not symmetric, since
The angle between two complex vectors is then given by
This type of scalar product is nevertheless useful, and leads to the notions of Hermitian form and of general inner product spaces.
The self dot product of a complex vector is a generalization of the absolute square of a complex scalar.
Inner product
The inner product generalizes the dot product to abstract vector spaces over a field of scalars, being either the field of real numbers or the field of complex numbers. It is usually denoted using angular brackets by.The inner product of two vectors over the field of complex numbers is, in general, a complex number, and is sesquilinear instead of bilinear. An inner product space is a normed vector space, and the inner product of a vector with itself is real and positive-definite.
Functions
The dot product is defined for vectors that have a finite number of entries. Thus these vectors can be regarded as discrete functions: a length- vector is, then, a function with domain, and is a notation for the image of by the function/vector.This notion can be generalized to continuous functions: just as the inner product on vectors uses a sum over corresponding components, the inner product on functions is defined as an integral over some interval :
Generalized further to complex functions and, by analogy with the complex inner product above, gives
Weight function
Inner products can have a weight function, i.e. a function which weights each term of the inner product with a value. Explicitly, the inner product of functions and with respect to the weight function isDyadics and matrices
have the Frobenius inner product, which is analogous to the vector inner product. It is defined as the sum of the products of the corresponding components of two matrices A and B having the same size:Dyadics have a dot product and "double" dot product defined on them, see Dyadics for their definitions.