In Euclidean geometry, a plane is a flat two-dimensional surface that extends indefinitely. Euclidean planes often arise as subspaces of three-dimensional space . A prototypical example is one of a room's walls, infinitely extended and assumed infinitesimal thin. While a pair of real numbers suffices to describe points on a plane, the relationship with out-of-plane points requires special consideration for their embedding in the ambient space .
Derived concepts
A plane segment or planar region (or simply "plane", in lay use) is a planar surface region; it is analogous to a line segment. A bivector is an oriented plane segment, analogous to directed line segments. A face is a plane segment bounding a solid object. A slab is a region bounded by two parallel planes. A parallelepiped is a region bounded by three pairs of parallel planes.
Background
Euclid set forth the first great landmark of mathematical thought, an axiomatic treatment of geometry. He selected a small core of undefined terms (called common notions) and postulates (or axioms) which he then used to prove various geometrical statements. Although the plane in its modern sense is not directly given a definition anywhere in the Elements, it may be thought of as part of the common notions. Euclid never used numbers to measure length, angle, or area. The Euclidean plane equipped with a chosen Cartesian coordinate system is called a Cartesian plane; a non-Cartesian Euclidean plane equipped with a polar coordinate system would be called a polar plane.
A plane is a ruled surface.
Euclidean plane
In mathematics, a Euclidean plane is a Euclidean space of dimension two, denoted or . It is a geometric space in which two real numbers are required to determine the position of each point. It is an affine space, which includes in particular the concept of parallel lines. It has also metrical properties induced by a distance, which allows to define circles, and angle measurement.
A Euclidean plane with a chosen Cartesian coordinate system is called a Cartesian plane.
The set of the ordered pairs of real numbers (the real coordinate plane), equipped with the dot product, is often called the Euclidean plane or standard Euclidean plane, since every Euclidean plane is isomorphic to it.Representation
This section is solely concerned with planes embedded in three dimensions: specifically, in R3.
Determination by contained points and lines
In a Euclidean space of any number of dimensions, a plane is uniquely determined by any of the following:
- Three non-collinear points (points not on a single line).
- A line and a point not on that line.
- Two distinct but intersecting lines.
- Two distinct but parallel lines.
Properties
The following statements hold in three-dimensional Euclidean space but not in higher dimensions, though they have higher-dimensional analogues:
- Two distinct planes are either parallel or they intersect in a line.
- A line is either parallel to a plane, intersects it at a single point, or is contained in the plane.
- Two distinct lines perpendicular to the same plane must be parallel to each other.
- Two distinct planes perpendicular to the same line must be parallel to each other.
Point–normal form and general form of the equation of a plane
In a manner analogous to the way lines in a two-dimensional space are described using a point-slope form for their equations, planes in a three dimensional space have a natural description using a point in the plane and a vector orthogonal to it (the normal vector) to indicate its "inclination".
Specifically, let r0 be the position vector of some point P0 = (x0, y0, z0), and let n = (a, b, c) be a nonzero vector. The plane determined by the point P0 and the vector n consists of those points P, with position vector r, such that the vector drawn from P0 to P is perpendicular to n. Recalling that two vectors are perpendicular if and only if their dot product is zero, it follows that the desired plane can be described as the set of all points r such that The dot here means a dot (scalar) product.
Expanded this becomes which is the point–normal form of the equation of a plane. This is just a linear equation where which is the expanded form of
In mathematics it is a common convention to express the normal as a unit vector, but the above argument holds for a normal vector of any non-zero length.
Conversely, it is easily shown that if a, b, c, and d are constants and a, b, and c are not all zero, then the graph of the equation is a plane having the vector n = (a, b, c) as a normal. This familiar equation for a plane is called the general form of the equation of the plane or just the plane equation.
Thus for example a regression equation of the form y = d + ax + cz (with b = −1) establishes a best-fit plane in three-dimensional space when there are two explanatory variables.
Describing a plane with a point and two vectors lying on it
Alternatively, a plane may be described parametrically as the set of all points of the form
where s and t range over all real numbers, v and w are given linearly independent vectors defining the plane, and r0 is the vector representing the position of an arbitrary (but fixed) point on the plane. The vectors v and w can be visualized as vectors starting at r0 and pointing in different directions along the plane. The vectors v and w can be perpendicular, but cannot be parallel.
Describing a plane through three points
Let p1 = (x1, y1, z1), p2 = (x2, y2, z2), and p3 = (x3, y3, z3) be non-collinear points.
Method 1
The plane passing through p1, p2, and p3 can be described as the set of all points (x,y,z) that satisfy the following determinant equations:
Method 2
To describe the plane by an equation of the form , solve the following system of equations:
This system can be solved using Cramer's rule and basic matrix manipulations. Let
If D is non-zero (so for planes not through the origin) the values for a, b and c can be calculated as follows:
These equations are parametric in d. Setting d equal to any non-zero number and substituting it into these equations will yield one solution set.
Method 3
This plane can also be described by the § Point–normal form and general form of the equation of a plane prescription above. A suitable normal vector is given by the cross product and the point r0 can be taken to be any of the given points p1, p2 or p3 (or any other point in the plane).
Operations
Distance from a point to a plane
In Euclidean space, the distance from a point to a plane is the distance between a given point and its orthogonal projection on the plane, the perpendicular distance to the nearest point on the plane.
It can be found starting with a change of variables that moves the origin to coincide with the given point then finding the point on the shifted plane that is closest to the origin. The resulting point has Cartesian coordinates :
- .
Line–plane intersection
In analytic geometry, the intersection of a line and a plane in three-dimensional space can be the empty set, a point, or a line. It is the entire line if that line is embedded in the plane, and is the empty set if the line is parallel to the plane but outside it. Otherwise, the line cuts through the plane at a single point.
Distinguishing these cases, and determining equations for the point and line in the latter cases, have use in computer graphics, motion planning, and collision detection.Line of intersection between two planes
Sphere–plane intersection
When the intersection of a sphere and a plane is not empty or a single point, it is a circle. This can be seen as follows:
Let S be a sphere with center O, P a plane which intersects S. Draw OE perpendicular to P and meeting P at E. Let A and B be any two different points in the intersection. Then AOE and BOE are right triangles with a common side, OE, and hypotenuses AO and BO equal. Therefore, the remaining sides AE and BE are equal. This proves that all points in the intersection are the same distance from the point E in the plane P, in other words all points in the intersection lie on a circle C with center E. This proves that the intersection of P and S is contained in C. Note that OE is the axis of the circle.
Now consider a point D of the circle C. Since C lies in P, so does D. On the other hand, the triangles AOE and DOE are right triangles with a common side, OE, and legs EA and ED equal. Therefore, the hypotenuses AO and DO are equal, and equal to the radius of S, so that D lies in S. This proves that C is contained in the intersection of P and S.
As a corollary, on a sphere there is exactly one circle that can be drawn through three given points.
The proof can be extended to show that the points on a circle are all a common angular distance from one of its poles.
Compare also conic sections, which can produce ovals.Occurrence in nature
A plane serves as a mathematical model for many physical phenomena, such as specular reflection in a plane mirror or wavefronts in a traveling plane wave. The free surface of undisturbed liquids tends to be nearly flat (see flatness). The flattest surface ever manufactured is a quantum-stabilized atom mirror. In astronomy, various reference planes are used to define positions in orbit. Anatomical planes may be lateral ("sagittal"), frontal ("coronal") or transversal. In geology, beds (layers of sediments) often are planar. Planes are involved in different forms of imaging, such as the focal plane, picture plane, and image plane.
Miller indices
The attitude of a lattice plane is the orientation of the line normal to the plane, and is described by the plane's Miller indices. In three-space a family of planes (a series of parallel planes) can be denoted by its Miller indices (hkl), so the family of planes has an attitude common to all its constituent planes.
Strike and dip
Many features observed in geology are planes or lines, and their orientation is commonly referred to as their attitude. These attitudes are specified with two angles.
For a line, these angles are called the trend and the plunge. The trend is the compass direction of the line, and the plunge is the downward angle it makes with a horizontal plane.
For a plane, the two angles are called its strike (angle) and its dip (angle). A strike line is the intersection of a horizontal plane with the observed planar feature (and therefore a horizontal line), and the strike angle is the bearing of this line (that is, relative to geographic north or from magnetic north). The dip is the angle between a horizontal plane and the observed planar feature as observed in a third vertical plane perpendicular to the strike line.
See also
- Dihedral angle
- Flat (geometry)
- Half-plane
- Hyperplane
- Plane coordinates
- Plane of incidence
- Plane of rotation
- Plane orientation
- Polygon
Notes
Explanatory notes
- More precisely, an algebraic entity analogous to an equivalence class of oriented plane segments.
Citations
- Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (Eleventh ed.). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster. 2004.
- Eves 1963, p. 19
- Joyce, D. E. (1996), Euclid's Elements, Book I, Definition 7, Clark University, retrieved 8 August 2009
- Anton 1994, p. 155
- Anton 1994, p. 156
- Weisstein, Eric W. (2009), "Plane", MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource, retrieved 8 August 2009
- Dawkins, Paul, "Equations of Planes", Calculus III
- Proof follows Hobbs, Prop. 304
- Hobbs, Prop. 308
- Hobbs, Prop. 310
- Evans, Jon (22 August 2008). "Smoothest surface ever is a mirror for atoms". New Scientist. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
- William Anthony Granville (1904). "§178 Normal line to a surface". Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus. Ginn & Company. p. 275.
- Augustus Edward Hough Love (1892). A Treatise on the Mathematical Theory of Elasticity. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. p. 79 ff.
- Marcus Frederick Charles Ladd; Rex Alfred Palmer (2003). "§2.3 Families of planes and interplanar spacings". Structure Determination by X-Ray Crystallography (4th ed.). Springer. p. 62 ff. ISBN 0-306-47454-9.
- Stephen Mark Rowland; Ernest M. Duebendorfer; Ilsa M. Schiefelbein (2007). "Attitudes of lines and planes". Structural Analysis and Synthesis: A Laboratory Course in Structural Geology (3rd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. p. 1 ff. ISBN 978-1-4051-1652-7.
References
- Anton, Howard (1994), Elementary Linear Algebra (7th ed.), John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-58742-7
- Eves, Howard (1963), A Survey of Geometry, vol. I, Boston: Allyn and Bacon, Inc.
- Hobbs, Charles Austen (1921). Solid Geometry. Cambridge, G.H. Kent. pp. 396-400. LCCN 21016427.
External links
- "Plane", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Plane". MathWorld.
- "Easing the Difficulty of Arithmetic and Planar Geometry" is an Arabic manuscript, from the 15th century, that serves as a tutorial about plane geometry and arithmetic.
In Euclidean geometry a plane is a flat two dimensional surface that extends indefinitely Euclidean planes often arise as subspaces of three dimensional space R3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 A prototypical example is one of a room s walls infinitely extended and assumed infinitesimal thin While a pair of real numbers R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 suffices to describe points on a plane the relationship with out of plane points requires special consideration for their embedding in the ambient space R3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 Plane equation in normal formDerived conceptsA plane segment or planar region or simply plane in lay use is a planar surface region it is analogous to a line segment A bivector is an oriented plane segment analogous to directed line segments A face is a plane segment bounding a solid object A slab is a region bounded by two parallel planes A parallelepiped is a region bounded by three pairs of parallel planes BackgroundEuclid set forth the first great landmark of mathematical thought an axiomatic treatment of geometry He selected a small core of undefined terms called common notions and postulates or axioms which he then used to prove various geometrical statements Although the plane in its modern sense is not directly given a definition anywhere in the Elements it may be thought of as part of the common notions Euclid never used numbers to measure length angle or area The Euclidean plane equipped with a chosen Cartesian coordinate system is called a Cartesian plane a non Cartesian Euclidean plane equipped with a polar coordinate system would be called a polar plane Three parallel planes A plane is a ruled surface Euclidean plane This section is an excerpt from Euclidean plane edit Bi dimensional Cartesian coordinate system In mathematics a Euclidean plane is a Euclidean space of dimension two denoted E2 displaystyle textbf E 2 or E2 displaystyle mathbb E 2 It is a geometric space in which two real numbers are required to determine the position of each point It is an affine space which includes in particular the concept of parallel lines It has also metrical properties induced by a distance which allows to define circles and angle measurement A Euclidean plane with a chosen Cartesian coordinate system is called a Cartesian plane The set R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 of the ordered pairs of real numbers the real coordinate plane equipped with the dot product is often called the Euclidean plane or standard Euclidean plane since every Euclidean plane is isomorphic to it RepresentationThis section is solely concerned with planes embedded in three dimensions specifically in R3 Determination by contained points and lines In a Euclidean space of any number of dimensions a plane is uniquely determined by any of the following Three non collinear points points not on a single line A line and a point not on that line Two distinct but intersecting lines Two distinct but parallel lines Properties The following statements hold in three dimensional Euclidean space but not in higher dimensions though they have higher dimensional analogues Two distinct planes are either parallel or they intersect in a line A line is either parallel to a plane intersects it at a single point or is contained in the plane Two distinct lines perpendicular to the same plane must be parallel to each other Two distinct planes perpendicular to the same line must be parallel to each other Point normal form and general form of the equation of a plane In a manner analogous to the way lines in a two dimensional space are described using a point slope form for their equations planes in a three dimensional space have a natural description using a point in the plane and a vector orthogonal to it the normal vector to indicate its inclination Specifically let r0 be the position vector of some point P0 x0 y0 z0 and let n a b c be a nonzero vector The plane determined by the point P0 and the vector n consists of those points P with position vector r such that the vector drawn from P0 to P is perpendicular to n Recalling that two vectors are perpendicular if and only if their dot product is zero it follows that the desired plane can be described as the set of all points r such that n r r0 0 displaystyle boldsymbol n cdot boldsymbol r boldsymbol r 0 0 The dot here means a dot scalar product Expanded this becomes a x x0 b y y0 c z z0 0 displaystyle a x x 0 b y y 0 c z z 0 0 which is the point normal form of the equation of a plane This is just a linear equation ax by cz d 0 displaystyle ax by cz d 0 where d ax0 by0 cz0 displaystyle d ax 0 by 0 cz 0 which is the expanded form of n r0 displaystyle boldsymbol n cdot boldsymbol r 0 In mathematics it is a common convention to express the normal as a unit vector but the above argument holds for a normal vector of any non zero length Conversely it is easily shown that if a b c and d are constants and a b and c are not all zero then the graph of the equation ax by cz d 0 displaystyle ax by cz d 0 is a plane having the vector n a b c as a normal This familiar equation for a plane is called the general form of the equation of the plane or just the plane equation Thus for example a regression equation of the form y d ax cz with b 1 establishes a best fit plane in three dimensional space when there are two explanatory variables Describing a plane with a point and two vectors lying on it Alternatively a plane may be described parametrically as the set of all points of the form r r0 sv tw displaystyle boldsymbol r boldsymbol r 0 s boldsymbol v t boldsymbol w Vector description of a plane where s and t range over all real numbers v and w are given linearly independent vectors defining the plane and r0 is the vector representing the position of an arbitrary but fixed point on the plane The vectors v and w can be visualized as vectors starting at r0 and pointing in different directions along the plane The vectors v and w can be perpendicular but cannot be parallel Describing a plane through three points Let p1 x1 y1 z1 p2 x2 y2 z2 and p3 x3 y3 z3 be non collinear points Method 1 The plane passing through p1 p2 and p3 can be described as the set of all points x y z that satisfy the following determinant equations x x1y y1z z1x2 x1y2 y1z2 z1x3 x1y3 y1z3 z1 x x1y y1z z1x x2y y2z z2x x3y y3z z3 0 displaystyle begin vmatrix x x 1 amp y y 1 amp z z 1 x 2 x 1 amp y 2 y 1 amp z 2 z 1 x 3 x 1 amp y 3 y 1 amp z 3 z 1 end vmatrix begin vmatrix x x 1 amp y y 1 amp z z 1 x x 2 amp y y 2 amp z z 2 x x 3 amp y y 3 amp z z 3 end vmatrix 0 Method 2 To describe the plane by an equation of the form ax by cz d 0 displaystyle ax by cz d 0 solve the following system of equations ax1 by1 cz1 d 0 displaystyle ax 1 by 1 cz 1 d 0 ax2 by2 cz2 d 0 displaystyle ax 2 by 2 cz 2 d 0 ax3 by3 cz3 d 0 displaystyle ax 3 by 3 cz 3 d 0 This system can be solved using Cramer s rule and basic matrix manipulations Let D x1y1z1x2y2z2x3y3z3 displaystyle D begin vmatrix x 1 amp y 1 amp z 1 x 2 amp y 2 amp z 2 x 3 amp y 3 amp z 3 end vmatrix If D is non zero so for planes not through the origin the values for a b and c can be calculated as follows a dD 1y1z11y2z21y3z3 displaystyle a frac d D begin vmatrix 1 amp y 1 amp z 1 1 amp y 2 amp z 2 1 amp y 3 amp z 3 end vmatrix b dD x11z1x21z2x31z3 displaystyle b frac d D begin vmatrix x 1 amp 1 amp z 1 x 2 amp 1 amp z 2 x 3 amp 1 amp z 3 end vmatrix c dD x1y11x2y21x3y31 displaystyle c frac d D begin vmatrix x 1 amp y 1 amp 1 x 2 amp y 2 amp 1 x 3 amp y 3 amp 1 end vmatrix These equations are parametric in d Setting d equal to any non zero number and substituting it into these equations will yield one solution set Method 3 This plane can also be described by the Point normal form and general form of the equation of a plane prescription above A suitable normal vector is given by the cross product n p2 p1 p3 p1 displaystyle boldsymbol n boldsymbol p 2 boldsymbol p 1 times boldsymbol p 3 boldsymbol p 1 and the point r0 can be taken to be any of the given points p1 p2 or p3 or any other point in the plane OperationsDistance from a point to a plane This section is an excerpt from Distance from a point to a plane edit In Euclidean space the distance from a point to a plane is the distance between a given point and its orthogonal projection on the plane the perpendicular distance to the nearest point on the plane It can be found starting with a change of variables that moves the origin to coincide with the given point then finding the point on the shifted plane ax by cz d displaystyle ax by cz d that is closest to the origin The resulting point has Cartesian coordinates x y z displaystyle x y z x ada2 b2 c2 y bda2 b2 c2 z cda2 b2 c2 displaystyle displaystyle x frac ad a 2 b 2 c 2 quad quad displaystyle y frac bd a 2 b 2 c 2 quad quad displaystyle z frac cd a 2 b 2 c 2 The distance between the origin and the point x y z displaystyle x y z is x2 y2 z2 displaystyle sqrt x 2 y 2 z 2 Line plane intersection This section is an excerpt from Line plane intersection edit The three possible plane line relationships in three dimensions Shown in each case is only a portion of the plane which extends infinitely far In analytic geometry the intersection of a line and a plane in three dimensional space can be the empty set a point or a line It is the entire line if that line is embedded in the plane and is the empty set if the line is parallel to the plane but outside it Otherwise the line cuts through the plane at a single point Distinguishing these cases and determining equations for the point and line in the latter cases have use in computer graphics motion planning and collision detection Line of intersection between two planes This section is an excerpt from Plane plane intersection edit Two intersecting planes in three dimensional space In analytic geometry the intersection of two planes in three dimensional space is a line Sphere plane intersection This section is an excerpt from Intersection geometry A sphere and a plane edit When the intersection of a sphere and a plane is not empty or a single point it is a circle This can be seen as follows Let S be a sphere with center O P a plane which intersects S Draw OE perpendicular to P and meeting P at E Let A and B be any two different points in the intersection Then AOE and BOE are right triangles with a common side OE and hypotenuses AO and BO equal Therefore the remaining sides AE and BE are equal This proves that all points in the intersection are the same distance from the point E in the plane P in other words all points in the intersection lie on a circle C with center E This proves that the intersection of P and S is contained in C Note that OE is the axis of the circle Now consider a point D of the circle C Since C lies in P so does D On the other hand the triangles AOE and DOE are right triangles with a common side OE and legs EA and ED equal Therefore the hypotenuses AO and DO are equal and equal to the radius of S so that D lies in S This proves that C is contained in the intersection of P and S As a corollary on a sphere there is exactly one circle that can be drawn through three given points The proof can be extended to show that the points on a circle are all a common angular distance from one of its poles Compare also conic sections which can produce ovals Occurrence in natureThe wavefronts of a plane wave traveling in 3 space A plane serves as a mathematical model for many physical phenomena such as specular reflection in a plane mirror or wavefronts in a traveling plane wave The free surface of undisturbed liquids tends to be nearly flat see flatness The flattest surface ever manufactured is a quantum stabilized atom mirror In astronomy various reference planes are used to define positions in orbit Anatomical planes may be lateral sagittal frontal coronal or transversal In geology beds layers of sediments often are planar Planes are involved in different forms of imaging such as the focal plane picture plane and image plane Beds of sedimentary rock at Parque Geologico do Varvito Itu Sao Paulo BrazilMiller indices Planes with different Miller indices in cubic crystals The attitude of a lattice plane is the orientation of the line normal to the plane and is described by the plane s Miller indices In three space a family of planes a series of parallel planes can be denoted by its Miller indices hkl so the family of planes has an attitude common to all its constituent planes Strike and dip Strike line and dip of a plane describing attitude relative to a horizontal plane and a vertical plane perpendicular to the strike line Many features observed in geology are planes or lines and their orientation is commonly referred to as their attitude These attitudes are specified with two angles For a line these angles are called the trend and the plunge The trend is the compass direction of the line and the plunge is the downward angle it makes with a horizontal plane For a plane the two angles are called its strike angle and its dip angle A strike line is the intersection of a horizontal plane with the observed planar feature and therefore a horizontal line and the strike angle is the bearing of this line that is relative to geographic north or from magnetic north The dip is the angle between a horizontal plane and the observed planar feature as observed in a third vertical plane perpendicular to the strike line See alsoDihedral angle Flat geometry Half plane Hyperplane Plane coordinates Plane of incidence Plane of rotation Plane orientation PolygonNotesExplanatory notes More precisely an algebraic entity analogous to an equivalence class of oriented plane segments Citations Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary Eleventh ed Springfield MA Merriam Webster 2004 Eves 1963 p 19 Joyce D E 1996 Euclid s Elements Book I Definition 7 Clark University retrieved 8 August 2009 Anton 1994 p 155 Anton 1994 p 156 Weisstein Eric W 2009 Plane MathWorld A Wolfram Web Resource retrieved 8 August 2009 Dawkins Paul Equations of Planes Calculus III Proof follows Hobbs Prop 304 Hobbs Prop 308 Hobbs Prop 310 Evans Jon 22 August 2008 Smoothest surface ever is a mirror for atoms New Scientist Retrieved 5 March 2023 William Anthony Granville 1904 178 Normal line to a surface Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus Ginn amp Company p 275 Augustus Edward Hough Love 1892 A Treatise on the Mathematical Theory of Elasticity Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 79 ff Marcus Frederick Charles Ladd Rex Alfred Palmer 2003 2 3 Families of planes and interplanar spacings Structure Determination by X Ray Crystallography 4th ed Springer p 62 ff ISBN 0 306 47454 9 Stephen Mark Rowland Ernest M Duebendorfer Ilsa M Schiefelbein 2007 Attitudes of lines and planes Structural Analysis and Synthesis A Laboratory Course in Structural Geology 3rd ed Wiley Blackwell p 1 ff ISBN 978 1 4051 1652 7 ReferencesAnton Howard 1994 Elementary Linear Algebra 7th ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 58742 7 Eves Howard 1963 A Survey of Geometry vol I Boston Allyn and Bacon Inc Hobbs Charles Austen 1921 Solid Geometry Cambridge G H Kent pp 396 400 LCCN 21016427 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Euclidean planes in three dimensional space Plane Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Weisstein Eric W Plane MathWorld Easing the Difficulty of Arithmetic and Planar Geometry is an Arabic manuscript from the 15th century that serves as a tutorial about plane geometry and arithmetic