Analytic geometry | Operations on vectors | Bilinear maps

Cross product

In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here ), and is denoted by the symbol . Given two linearly independent vectors a and b, the cross product, a × b (read "a cross b"), is a vector that is perpendicular to both a and b, and thus normal to the plane containing them. It has many applications in mathematics, physics, engineering, and computer programming. It should not be confused with the dot product (projection product). If two vectors have the same direction or have the exact opposite direction from each other (that is, they are not linearly independent), or if either one has zero length, then their cross product is zero. More generally, the magnitude of the product equals the area of a parallelogram with the vectors for sides; in particular, the magnitude of the product of two perpendicular vectors is the product of their lengths. The cross product is anticommutative (that is, a × b = − b × a) and is distributive over addition (that is, a × (b + c) = a × b + a × c). The space together with the cross product is an algebra over the real numbers, which is neither commutative nor associative, but is a Lie algebra with the cross product being the Lie bracket. Like the dot product, it depends on the metric of Euclidean space, but unlike the dot product, it also depends on a choice of orientation (or "handedness") of the space (it's why an oriented space is needed). In connection with the cross product, the exterior product of vectors can be used in arbitrary dimensions (with a bivector or 2-form result) and is independent of the orientation of the space. The product can be generalized in various ways, using the orientation and metric structure just as for the traditional 3-dimensional cross product, one can, in n dimensions, take the product of n − 1 vectors to produce a vector perpendicular to all of them. But if the product is limited to non-trivial binary products with vector results, it exists only in three and seven dimensions. The cross-product in seven dimensions has undesirable properties (e.g. it fails to satisfy the Jacobi identity), however, so it is not used in mathematical physics to represent quantities such as multi-dimensional space-time. (See , below, for other dimensions.) (Wikipedia).

Cross product
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Vector cross product

The vector cross-product is another form of vector multiplication and results in another vector. In this tutorial I show you a simple way of calculating the cross product of two vectors.

From playlist Introducing linear algebra

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Calculus 3: Vector Calculus in 3-D (18 of 35) What is a Cross Product?

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain what is a cross product. The cross product of 2 vectors A and B is another vector C and is directed perpendicular to the plane containing A and B. Next video in the series can be seen at: htt

From playlist THE "WHAT IS" PLAYLIST

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Vector Cross Product: How to derive

How to derive the cross product formula for vectors. Free ebook https://bookboon.com/en/introduction-to-vectors-ebook (updated link) Test your understanding via a short quiz http://goo.gl/forms/BKJt1pY0Dc

From playlist Introduction to Vectors

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Cross product of vectors

What is the cross product of two vectors? How is it useful? Free ebook https://bookboon.com/en/introduction-to-vectors-ebook (updated link) Test your understanding via a short quiz http://goo.gl/forms/Ii3hPtwksX

From playlist Introduction to Vectors

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Defining the Cross Product from Scratch

The cross product takes in two vectors and returns a vector orthogonal, or perpendicular, to both of them. Such a clean and simple property, however, is usually mired in its daunting formula. In this video, I show how one might think to define an operation that would return a vector orthog

From playlist Fun

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Multivariable Calculus: Cross Product

In this video we explore how to compute the cross product of two vectors using determinants.

From playlist Multivariable Calculus

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Cross product and area of parallelogram

How to compute area of parallelogram via cross products of vectors. Free ebook https://bookboon.com/en/introduction-to-vectors-ebook (updated link) Test your understanding via a short quiz http://goo.gl/forms/v8utjHDRT3

From playlist Introduction to Vectors

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Cross product differentiation example

Free ebook http://tinyurl.com/EngMathYT How to differentiate a cross product of vector valued functions of one variable.

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Ex 2: Properties of Cross Products - Cross Product of a Sum and Difference

This video explains how to find the cross product of a sum and difference of two vectors. Site: http://mathispower4u.com

From playlist Vectors in Space (3D)

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Worldwide Calculus: The Cross Product

Lecture on 'The Cross Product' from 'Worldwide Multivariable Calculus'. For more lecture videos and $10 digital textbooks, visit www.centerofmath.org.

From playlist Worldwide Multivariable Calculus

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Linear Algebra 3.5 Cross Product

My notes are available at http://asherbroberts.com/ (so you can write along with me). Elementary Linear Algebra: Applications Version 12th Edition by Howard Anton, Chris Rorres, and Anton Kaul

From playlist Linear Algebra

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Calculus 12.4 The Cross Product

My notes are available at http://asherbroberts.com/ (so you can write along with me). Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition by James Stewart

From playlist Calculus

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The Cross Product and Meister's Formula | Algebraic Calculus One | Wild Egg

In this lecture, we introduce the cross product of two planar vectors: a somewhat novel notion that allows us to establish the signed area notion for general triangles. We are touching base with linear algebraic ideas here in establishing the linearity and skew-symmetric properties of the

From playlist Algebraic Calculus One from Wild Egg

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Cross Product Vector Product Example & Properties

I introduce the Vector Product, Cross Product, formula and show you how to write the formula by finding the determinant of a 3x3 matrix through the determinant of multiple 2x2 matrices. Example 1) Find the cross product of two vectors UxV 7:49 Example 2) Dot product to determine the rela

From playlist Vector Math Lessons

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MV3D Chapter 2.4

This video covers all of Chapter 2.4. These videos are associated the textbook by Scott Stevens entitled Matrices, Vectors, & 3D Math; A Game-Programming approach with MATLAB (http://www.StevensMV3D.com).

From playlist Matrices, Vectors, & 3D Math: Lecture Videos

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Part I: Vector Arithmetic, Lec 5 | MIT Calculus Revisited: Multivariable Calculus

Part I: Vector Arithmetic, Lecture 5: The Cross Product Instructor: Herbert Gross View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/RES18-007F11 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu

From playlist MIT Calculus Revisited: Multivariable Calculus

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Geometric Algebra - Duality and the Cross Product

In this video, we will introduce the concept of duality, involving a multiplication by the pseudoscalar. We will observe the geometric meaning of duality and also see that the cross product and wedge product are dual to one another, which means that the cross product is already contained w

From playlist Geometric Algebra

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The Vector Cross Product

Vector multiplication can be tricky, and in fact there are two kinds of vector products. We already learned the dot product, which is a scalar, but there is another way to multiply vectors to get another vector, and it's called the cross product. Let's learn how to do this now! Watch the

From playlist Mathematics (All Of It)

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11M The Cross Product

The vector cross product

From playlist Linear Algebra

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Quaternions: Extracting the Dot and Cross Products

The most important operations upon vectors include the dot and cross products and are indispensable for doing physics and vector calculus. The dot product gives a quick way to check whether vectors are orthogonal and the cross product calculates a new vector orthogonal to both its inputs.

From playlist Quaternions

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