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Vectors and The Geometry of Space 12.5. Lines and Planes in Space

The document discusses lines and planes in 3D space. It defines a line as being determined by a point and a direction vector, and can be represented by a vector equation or parametric equations. A plane is defined as the set of points whose position vectors are orthogonal to a normal vector to the plane. The distance from a point to a line or plane can be calculated using projections and dot products. Examples are provided to illustrate these concepts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
130 views4 pages

Vectors and The Geometry of Space 12.5. Lines and Planes in Space

The document discusses lines and planes in 3D space. It defines a line as being determined by a point and a direction vector, and can be represented by a vector equation or parametric equations. A plane is defined as the set of points whose position vectors are orthogonal to a normal vector to the plane. The distance from a point to a line or plane can be calculated using projections and dot products. Examples are provided to illustrate these concepts.

Uploaded by

King Creative
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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12.

5 Lines and Planes in Space 1

Chapter 12. Vectors and the Geometry of Space


12.5. Lines and Planes in Space
Note. In the plane, a line is determined by a point and a number giving
the slope of the line. In space, a line is determined by a point and a vector
giving the direction of the line.

Figure 12.35, page 706

Definition. The vector equation for the line L through P0 (x0 , y0, z0)
parallel to v is
r(t) = r0 + tv, t ∈ (−∞, ∞),

where r is the position vector of a point P (x, y, z) on L and r0 is the


position vector of P0 (x0 , y0, z0) (and so r0 = hx0 , y0, z0i).
12.5 Lines and Planes in Space 2

Definition. The standard parametrization of the line through P0 (x0, y0 , z0)


parallel to v = v1i + v2j + v3 k is

x = x0 + tv1, y = y0 + tv2 , z = z0 + tv3 , t ∈ (−∞, ∞).

Example. Page 712, number 16.

Note. To find the distance from a point S to a line that passes through
a point P parallel to a vector v, we find the absolute value of the scalar
component of P~S in the direction of a vector normal to the line. As given
~ |P~S × v|
in Figure 12.38 below, this value is |P S| sin θ = .
|v|

Figure 12.38, page 708

Example. Page 713, number 36.


12.5 Lines and Planes in Space 3

Note. Suppose that plane M passes through a point P0(x0 , y0, z0) and
is normal to the nonzero vector n = Ai + Bj + Ck. Then M is the set
of all points P (x, y, z) for which P~0P is orthogonal to n. Thus, the dot
product n · P~0 P = 0. This yields

(Ai + Bj + Ck) · ((x − x0)i + (y − y0 )j + (z − z0)k) = 0

or
A(x − x0) + B(y − y0) + C(z − z0) = 0.

So the equation of a plane is determined by a point P0 and a normal vector


n.

Figure 12.39, page 709

Example. Page 713, number 22.

Example. Page 713, number 58.


12.5 Lines and Planes in Space 4

Note. If P is a point on a plane with normal vector n, then the distance


from any point S to the plane is the length

of the
vector projection of P~S

n
onto n. This distance is |projn P~S| = P~S ·

.

|n|

Example. Page 713, number 40.

Example. Page 714, number 70.

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