[Math] the difference between the dot product and the scalar projection

projectionvectors

I don't understand the difference between the dot product of two vectors and the scalar projection of a vector onto another one.

To me it looks like they are both (geometrically) the length of the vector projection. I am wrong since their formulas are different, so can anyone explain why?

Best Answer

Projection

The component of a vector a that is in the same direction as of vector b (Hence projection is a vector) Length of the projection does not depend on the length(magnitude) of b. See the image below

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Projection has two parts:

(i) The direction where you're projecting onto. That's the unit vector in direction of b, which is computed by dividing b by the length of b. That is $$\frac{b}{||b||}$$

(ii) The component of a in the direction of b. That is, the "shadow" or image of a when you project it onto b. This is computed by $$\frac{a⋅b}{||b||}$$ . because a⋅b=||a|| ||b|| cos(θ). Hence

||a||cos(θ)= $\frac{a⋅b}{||b||}$
and that gives you (as in the triangle figure), the length of a's projection on the direction of b

Putting it together, the projection of a onto b is a vector of length $$\frac{a⋅b}{||b||}$$

in the direction of $\frac{b}{||b||}$, i.e. $$\frac{a.b}{||b||} \frac{b}{||b||} $$

Dot Product

It's simply the projection of one vector onto the other multiplied by the magnitude of other vector. The dot product tells you what amount of one vector goes in the direction of another (Thus its a scalar ) and hence do not have any direction .

a.b= ||a|| ||b|| cos(θ). Alternatively if a=(x1,y1) and b=(x2,y2) (Position vectors) the dot product is x1.x2+y1.y2 .