Projecting a vector to another vector
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I would like to project a vector to another vector. You can find more information here:
For example I would like to project vector A to vector B. I have used these tricks but it does not work: Any comment is appreciated.
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Solution 1)
A=[-10,10,0];
B=[0,0,1];
C=(dot(A,B)/norm(B)^2)*B
---------------------------------
Solution 2)
A=[-10,10,0];
B=[0,0,1];
CosTheta = dot(A,B)/(norm(A)*norm(B));
ThetaInDegrees = acos(CosTheta)*180/pi;
c=norm(A)*cos(ThetaInDegrees)
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1 Kommentar
Matt Fig
am 2 Mär. 2011
You should select a best answer if your question has been answered.
Akzeptierte Antwort
Weitere Antworten (9)
Paulo Silva
am 28 Feb. 2011
A=[-10,10,0];
B=[0,0,1];
%calculation of the projection of A into B
C=(sum(A.*B)/(norm(B)^2))*B;
%versors of each vector
An=A/norm(A);
Bn=B/norm(B);
Cn=C/norm(C);
%graphic representation
clf
line([0 A(1)],[0 A(2)],[0 A(3)],'LineWidth',10,'Color',[0 0 1])
line([0 B(1)],[0 B(2)],[0 B(3)],'LineWidth',8,'Color',[0 1 0])
line([0 C(1)],[0 C(2)],[0 C(3)],'LineWidth',5,'Color',[1 0 0])
legend('A','B','proj A into B')
xlabel('X')
ylabel('Y')
zlabel('Z')
view(80,10)
5 Kommentare
Victor
am 28 Feb. 2011
Paulo Silva
am 28 Feb. 2011
there's something wrong with the code, please hold on
Matt Fig
am 28 Feb. 2011
Nice catch Paulo!
Use .*, .^ and ./ when you want to perform element-by-element operations. This makes no difference when one of the operands is scalar. Look at the difference for arrays:
A = [1 2;3 4];
B = [3 4;5 6].';
A*B
A.*B
3*A % No difference
3.*A
Paulo Silva
am 28 Feb. 2011
Should be working properly now
Victor
am 1 Mär. 2011
Jan
am 1 Mär. 2011
What exactly does "but it does not work" mean?
Your solution 1:
A = [-10,10,0];
B = [0,0,1];
C = (dot(A,B)/norm(B)^2)*B
This looks ok. If you get C = [0,0,0], the method works. A and B are orthogonal, such that the projection is zero.
Your solution 2: wrong
CosTheta = dot(A,B)/(norm(A)*norm(B));
ThetaInDegrees = acos(CosTheta)*180/pi;
c=norm(A)*cos(ThetaInDegrees)
Now c is a scalar, but you wanted a vector. Converting Theta in degrees is not correct here: COS works win radians. Use COSD for degerees. Improved:
CosTheta = dot(A,B) / (norm(A)*norm(B));
C = norm(A) * CosTheta * B / norm(B);
And as expected: If you insert CosTheta in the 2nd line, you get your solution 1 again.
2 Kommentare
Paulo Silva
am 1 Mär. 2011
I failed somehow to find the function dot and done sum(A.*B) instead :) but the results are the same
Jan
am 1 Mär. 2011
sum(A.*B) and A*B' are faster then DOT. But for [1 x 3] vectors this does not matter.
Victor
am 1 Mär. 2011
0 Stimmen
Foday Samura
am 1 Mai 2020
0 Stimmen
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fatema hasan
am 13 Dez. 2020
0 Stimmen
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fatema hasan
am 13 Dez. 2020
0 Stimmen
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fatema hasan
am 13 Dez. 2020
0 Stimmen
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Answer:
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fatema hasan
am 13 Dez. 2020
0 Stimmen
- Given two vectors: <1,4,3> and <1,0, -2>
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Brandon O'Neill
am 26 Mär. 2021
0 Stimmen
At a certain time of day the radiant energy from the sun reaches the roof along the direction given by the unit vector
The fraction of the sun’s energy which is falling perpendicularly on the roof is the projection of vector (A) onto the direction perpendicular to the roof – this is the dot product of (A) with the unit vector.
Q1) Use Matlab to calculate the fraction of the sun’s energy which is falling perpendicularly on the roof.
can anyone help with this?
the univ vector is [0.7627;0.5509;0.3390]
the vector A = 1/sqrt(21)[1;2;-4]
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