Unit vector


In mathematics, a unit vector in a normed vector space is a vector of length 1. A unit vector is often denoted by a lowercase letter with a circumflex, or "hat": .
The term direction vector is used to describe a unit vector being used to represent spatial direction, and such quantities are commonly denoted as d; 2D spatial directions represented this way are numerically equivalent to points on the unit circle.
The same construct is used to specify spatial directions in 3D, which are equivalent to a point on the unit sphere.
The normalized vector û of a non-zero vector u is the unit vector in the direction of u, i.e.,
where |u| is the norm of u. The term normalized vector is sometimes used as a synonym for unit vector.
Unit vectors are often chosen to form the basis of a vector space. Every vector in the space may be written as a linear combination of unit vectors.
By definition, in a Euclidean space the dot product of two unit vectors is a scalar value amounting to the cosine of the smaller subtended angle. In three-dimensional Euclidean space, the cross product of two arbitrary unit vectors is a third vector orthogonal to both of them having length equal to the sine of the smaller subtended angle. The normalized cross product corrects for this varying length, and yields the mutually orthogonal unit vector to the two inputs, applying the right-hand rule to resolve one of two possible directions.

Orthogonal coordinates

Cartesian coordinates

Unit vectors may be used to represent the axes of a Cartesian coordinate system. For instance, the unit vectors in the direction of the x, y, and z axes of a three dimensional Cartesian coordinate system are
They form a set of mutually orthogonal unit vectors, typically referred to as a standard basis in linear algebra.
They are often denoted using common vector notation rather than standard unit vector notation. In most contexts it can be assumed that i, j, and k, are versors of a 3-D Cartesian coordinate system. The notations,,, or, with or without hat, are also used, particularly in contexts where i, j, k might lead to confusion with another quantity.
When a unit vector in space is expressed, with Cartesian notation, as a linear combination of i, j, k, its three scalar components can be referred to as direction cosines. The value of each component is equal to the cosine of the angle formed by the unit vector with the respective basis vector. This is one of the methods used to describe the orientation of a straight line, segment of straight line, oriented axis, or segment of oriented axis.

Cylindrical coordinates

The three orthogonal unit vectors appropriate to cylindrical symmetry are:
They are related to the Cartesian basis,, by:
It is important to note that and are functions of, and are not constant in direction. When differentiating or integrating in cylindrical coordinates, these unit vectors themselves must also be operated on. For a more complete description, see Jacobian matrix. The derivatives with respect to are:

Spherical coordinates

The unit vectors appropriate to spherical symmetry are:, the direction in which the radial distance from the origin increases;, the direction in which the angle in the x-y plane counterclockwise from the positive x-axis is increasing; and, the direction in which the angle from the positive z axis is increasing. To minimize redundancy of representations, the polar angle is usually taken to lie between zero and 180 degrees. It is especially important to note the context of any ordered triplet written in spherical coordinates, as the roles of and are often reversed. Here, the American "physics" convention is used. This leaves the azimuthal angle defined the same as in cylindrical coordinates. The Cartesian relations are:
The spherical unit vectors depend on both and, and hence there are 5 possible non-zero derivatives. For a more complete description, see Jacobian matrix and determinant. The non-zero derivatives are:

General unit vectors

Common general themes of unit vectors occur throughout physics and geometry:
Unit vectorNomenclatureDiagram
Tangent vector to a curve/flux line
A normal vector to the plane containing and defined by the radial position vector and angular tangential direction of rotation is necessary so that the vector equations of angular motion hold.
Normal to a surface tangent plane/plane containing radial position component and angular tangential component
In terms of polar coordinates;

A normal vector to the plane containing and defined by the radial position vector and angular tangential direction of rotation is necessary so that the vector equations of angular motion hold.
Binormal vector to tangent and normal
A normal vector to the plane containing and defined by the radial position vector and angular tangential direction of rotation is necessary so that the vector equations of angular motion hold.
Parallel to some axis/line
One unit vector aligned parallel to a principal direction, and a perpendicular unit vector is in any radial direction relative to the principal line.
Perpendicular to some axis/line in some radial direction
One unit vector aligned parallel to a principal direction, and a perpendicular unit vector is in any radial direction relative to the principal line.
Possible angular deviation relative to some axis/line
Unit vector at acute deviation angle φ relative to a principal direction.

Curvilinear coordinates

In general, a coordinate system may be uniquely specified using a number of linearly independent unit vectors equal to the degrees of freedom of the space. For ordinary 3-space, these vectors may be denoted. It is nearly always convenient to define the system to be orthonormal and right-handed:
where is the Kronecker delta and is the Levi-Civita symbol.

Right versor

A unit vector in ℝ3 was called a right versor by W. R. Hamilton as he developed his quaternions ℍ ⊂ ℝ4. In fact, he was the originator of the term vector as every quaternion has a scalar part s and a vector part v. If v is a unit vector in ℝ3, then the square of v in quaternions is –1. By Euler's formula then, is a versor in the 3-sphere. When θ is a right angle, the versor is a right versor: its scalar part is zero and its vector part v is a unit vector in ℝ3.