Triple product

This article is about ternary operations on vectors. For the identity in number theory, see Jacobi triple product. For the product in nuclear fusion, see Lawson criterion.

In vector calculus, a branch of mathematics, the triple product is a product of three 3-dimensional vectors, usually Euclidean vectors. The name "triple product" is used for two different products, the scalar-valued scalar triple product and, less often, the vector-valued vector triple product.

Scalar triple product

Three vectors defining a parallelepiped

The scalar triple product (also called the mixed or box product) is defined as the dot product of one of the vectors with the cross product of the other two.

Geometric interpretation

Geometrically, the scalar triple product

 \mathbf{a}\cdot(\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c})

is the (signed) volume of the parallelepiped defined by the three vectors given. Here, the parentheses may be omitted without causing ambiguity, since the dot product cannot be evaluated first. If it were, it would leave the cross product of a scalar and a vector, which is not defined.

Properties

Scalar or pseudoscalar

Although the scalar triple product gives the volume of the parallelepiped, it is the signed volume, the sign depending on the orientation of the frame or the parity of the permutation of the vectors. This means the product is negated if the orientation is reversed, for example by a parity transformation, and so is more properly described as a pseudoscalar if the orientation can change.

This also relates to the handedness of the cross product; the cross product transforms as a pseudovector under parity transformations and so is properly described as a pseudovector. The dot product of two vectors is a scalar but the dot product of a pseudovector and a vector is a pseudoscalar, so the scalar triple product must be pseudoscalar-valued.

If T is a rotation operator, then


\mathbf{Ta} \cdot (\mathbf{Tb} \times \mathbf{Tc}) =
\mathbf{a} \cdot (\mathbf{b} \times \mathbf{c}),

but if T is an improper rotation, then


\mathbf{Ta} \cdot (\mathbf{Tb} \times \mathbf{Tc}) =
-\mathbf{a} \cdot (\mathbf{b} \times \mathbf{c}).

As an exterior product

The three vectors spanning a parallelepiped have triple product equal to its volume.

In exterior algebra and geometric algebra the exterior product of two vectors is a bivector, while the exterior product of three vectors is a trivector. A bivector is an oriented plane element and a trivector is an oriented volume element, in the same way that a vector is an oriented line element. Given vectors a, b and c, the product

\mathbf{a} \wedge \mathbf{b} \wedge \mathbf{c}

is a trivector with magnitude equal to the scalar triple product, and is the Hodge dual of the triple product. As the exterior product is associative brackets are not needed as it does not matter which of ab or bc is calculated first, though the order of the vectors in the product does matter. Geometrically the trivector abc corresponds to the parallelepiped spanned by a, b, and c, with bivectors ab, bc and ac matching the parallelogram faces of the parallelepiped.

As a trilinear functional

The triple product is identical to the volume form of the Euclidean 3-space applied to the vectors via interior product. It also can be expressed as a contraction of vectors with a rank-3 tensor equivalent to the form (or a pseudotensor equivalent to the volume pseudoform); see below.

Vector triple product

The vector triple product is defined as the cross product of one vector with the cross product of the other two. The following relationship holds:

\mathbf{a}\times (\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}) \equiv \mathbf{b}(\mathbf{a}\cdot\mathbf{c}) - \mathbf{c}(\mathbf{a}\cdot\mathbf{b}).

This is known as triple product expansion, or Lagrange's formula,[2][3] although the latter name is also used for several other formulae. Its right hand side can be remembered by using the mnemonic "BAC  CAB", provided one keeps in mind which vectors are dotted together. A proof is provided below.

Since the cross product is anticommutative, this formula may also be written (up to permutation of the letters) as:

(\mathbf{a}\times \mathbf{b})\times \mathbf{c} \equiv -\mathbf{c}\times(\mathbf{a}\times \mathbf{b}) \equiv -(\mathbf{c}\cdot\mathbf{b})\mathbf{a} + (\mathbf{c}\cdot\mathbf{a})\mathbf{b}

From Lagrange's formula it follows that the vector triple product satisfies:

\mathbf{a}\times (\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}) + \mathbf{b}\times (\mathbf{c}\times \mathbf{a}) + \mathbf{c} \times (\mathbf{a}\times \mathbf{b}) \equiv 0

which is the Jacobi identity for the cross product. Another useful formula follows:

(\mathbf{a}\times \mathbf{b}) \times \mathbf{c} \equiv \mathbf{a}\times (\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}) - \mathbf{b} \times (\mathbf{a} \times \mathbf{c})

These formulas are very useful in simplifying vector calculations in physics. A related identity regarding gradients and useful in vector calculus is Lagrange's formula of vector cross-product identity:[4]

\boldsymbol{\nabla} \times (\boldsymbol{\nabla} \times \mathbf{f}) \equiv \boldsymbol{\nabla} (\boldsymbol{\nabla} \cdot  \mathbf{f}) - (\boldsymbol{\nabla} \cdot \boldsymbol{\nabla}) \mathbf{f}

This can be also regarded as a special case of the more general Laplace–de Rham operator \Delta = d \delta + \delta d.

Proof

The x component of \mathbf{u} \times (\mathbf{v}\times \mathbf{w}) is given by:

\begin{align}
  (\mathbf{u} \times (\mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{w}))_x
    &= \mathbf{u}_y(\mathbf{v}_x\mathbf{w}_y - \mathbf{v}_y\mathbf{w}_x) - \mathbf{u}_z(\mathbf{v}_z\mathbf{w}_x - \mathbf{v}_x\mathbf{w}_z) \\
    &= \mathbf{v}_x(\mathbf{u}_y\mathbf{w}_y + \mathbf{u}_z\mathbf{w}_z) - \mathbf{w}_x(\mathbf{u}_y\mathbf{v}_y + \mathbf{u}_z\mathbf{v}_z)
\end{align}

By adding and subtracting \mathbf{u}_x\mathbf{v}_x\mathbf{w}_x, this becomes

\begin{align}
  &= \mathbf{v}_x(\mathbf{u}_x\mathbf{w}_x + \mathbf{u}_y\mathbf{w}_y + \mathbf{u}_z\mathbf{w}_z) - \mathbf{w}_x(\mathbf{u}_x\mathbf{v}_x + \mathbf{u}_y\mathbf{v}_y + \mathbf{u}_z\mathbf{v}_z) \\
  &= (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{w})\mathbf{v}_x - (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{v})\mathbf{w}_x
\end{align}

Similarly, the y and z components of \mathbf{u}\times (\mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{w}) are given by:

\begin{align}
  (\mathbf{u} \times (\mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{w}))_y &= (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{w})\mathbf{v}_y - (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{v})\mathbf{w}_y \\
  (\mathbf{u} \times (\mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{w}))_z &= (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{w})\mathbf{v}_z - (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{v})\mathbf{w}_z
\end{align}

By combining these three components we obtain:

\mathbf{u}\times (\mathbf{v}\times \mathbf{w}) = (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{w})\ \mathbf{v} - (\mathbf{u}\cdot\mathbf{v})\ \mathbf{w}[5]

Using geometric algebra

If geometric algebra is used the cross product b × c of vectors is expressed as their exterior product bc, a bivector. The second cross product cannot be expressed as an exterior product, otherwise the scalar triple product would result. Instead a left contraction[6] can be used, so the formula becomes[7]

\begin{align}
  -\mathbf{a} \;\big\lrcorner\; (\mathbf{b} \wedge \mathbf{c}) &=  \mathbf{b}  \wedge (\mathbf{a} \;\big\lrcorner\; \mathbf{c}) - (\mathbf{a} \;\big\lrcorner\; \mathbf{b}) \wedge \mathbf{c} \\
                                                               &=  (\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{c}) \mathbf{b} - (\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b}) \mathbf{c}
\end{align}

The proof follows from the properties of the contraction.[6] The result is the same vector as calculated using a × (b × c).

Interpretations

Tensor calculus

In tensor notation the triple product is expressed using the Levi-Civita symbol:[8]

(\mathbf{a} \cdot [\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}]) = \varepsilon_{ijk} a^i b^j c^k

and

(\mathbf{a} \times [\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}])_i = \varepsilon_{ijk} a^j \varepsilon_{k\ell m} b^\ell c^m = \varepsilon_{ijk}\varepsilon_{k\ell m} a^j  b^\ell c^m,

referring to the ith component of the resulting vector. This can be simplified by performing a contraction on the Levi-Civita symbols, \varepsilon_{ijk} \varepsilon_{k\ell m}=-\varepsilon_{ijk} \varepsilon_{m\ell k}=\delta_{i\ell}\delta_{jm}-\delta_{im}\delta_{\ell j} where \delta_{ij} = 0 if i\neq j and \delta_{ij}=1 if i=j. We can reason out this identity by recognizing that the index k will be summed out leaving only i and j. In the first term, we fix i=l and thus j=m. Likewise, in the second term, we fix i=m and thus l=j.

Returning to the triple cross product,

(\mathbf{a} \times [\mathbf{b}\times \mathbf{c}])_i = (\delta_{i\ell}\delta_{jm} - \delta_{im}\delta_{\ell j}) a^j  b^\ell c^m = a^jb^i c^j - a^j  b^j c^i = \mathbf{b}_i(\mathbf{a}\cdot\mathbf{c}) - \mathbf{c}_i(\mathbf{a}\cdot\mathbf{b})

Notes

  1. Wong, Chun Wa (2013). Introduction to Mathematical Physics: Methods & Concepts. Oxford University Press. p. 215. ISBN 9780199641390.
  2. Joseph Louis Lagrange did not develop the cross product as an algebraic product on vectors, but did use an equivalent form of it in components: see Lagrange, J-L (1773). "Solutions analytiques de quelques problèmes sur les pyramides triangulaires". Oeuvres. vol 3. He may have written a formula similar to the triple product expansion in component form. See also Lagrange's identity and Kiyoshi Itō (1987). Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mathematics. MIT Press. p. 1679. ISBN 0-262-59020-4.
  3. Kiyoshi Itō (1993). "§C: Vector product". Encyclopedic dictionary of mathematics (2nd ed.). MIT Press. p. 1679. ISBN 0-262-59020-4.
  4. Pengzhi Lin (2008). Numerical Modelling of Water Waves: An Introduction to Engineers and Scientists. Routledge. p. 13. ISBN 0-415-41578-0.
  5. J. Heading (1970). Mathematical Methods in Science and Engineering. American Elsevier Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 262–263.
  6. 1 2 Pertti Lounesto (2001). Clifford algebras and spinors (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-521-00551-5.
  7. Janne Pesonen. "Geometric Algebra of One and Many Multivector Variables" (PDF). p. 37.
  8. "Permutation Tensor". Wolfram. Retrieved 21 May 2014.

References

External links

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