» Quaternions
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Quaternions

Quaternions

quaternions are a class of hypercomplex numbers with one real part 1 and three imaginary parts i, j, k. with these base elements every quaternion q can be described by four real numbers a, b, c, d using the linear combination:

q = a*1 + b*i + c*j + d*k = a + b*i + c*j + d*k

with

i² = j² = k² = i*j*k = -1

the absolute value |q| (the length) of q is one real number:

|q| = sqrt( a² + b² + c² + d² )

the quaternion set that solve this equation with |q|=r are equivalent to the set of 4-dimensional points on a 3-sphere with radius r.

a 3-sphere is the surface of a 4-dimensional sphere. it means all 4-dimensional points with the same distance r to the origin. it is called 3-sphere, because it has only 3 dimensions, like the surface of a sphere in our 3-dimensional space has only 2 dimensions.

imagine you live on a 3-dimensional sphere (hehe ;) then you can move only into 2 directions, like a point on a plane surface with x and y axis. a direct connection between two points on a sphere is a vector on a 2-sphere. it is sure that a vector on a 2-sphere has its corresponding vector in the 3-dimensional space because a vector on a sphere is like a translation of a 3-dimensional point on a circle. and this is like rotating a vector in a 2-dimensional plane.

now think all one dimension higher. then a vector on a 3-sphere is a translation of a 4-dimensional point on a 3-dimensional circle. and a 3-dimensional circle is a sphere in 3-dimensional space. this is like rotating a vector in the 3-dimensional space. this means also, that a 3-dimensional rotation can be described by a 4-dimensional vector.

the quaternion subset defined by the equation:

|q| = sqrt( a² + b² + c² + d² ) = 1

are equivalent to the set of 4-dimensional points on the unit 3-sphere. a differece vector between them are a 4-dimensional vector that describes a translation on a 3-dimensional circle in R4 ergo on a sphere in R3.

some intelligent people discovered, that a subset of the quaternions with |q| = 1 together with the quaternion multiplication are such 4-dimensional vectors, that discribe all translations on a 3-dimensional sphere (2-sphere) and this are the 3-dimensional rotations.

the easiest formula to set up a vvvv quaternion q = ( x, y, z, w) that represents a rotation is defined by an angle phi around a direction given by an unit vector n = (nx, ny, nz):

q = ( x, y, z, w ) = ( n * sin(phi/2) , cos(phi/2) ) =

q = ( nx * sin(phi/2), ny * sin(phi/2), nz * sin(phi/2), cos(phi/2) )

vvvv node: axisangle-(quaternion-set): or axisangle-(quaternion-set-vector):

this is a much simpler representation of a rotation than the usual 3x3 matrices. rotate a vector by a quaternion and the combination of many rotations can be computed with quaternions also faster than with 3x3 matrices. thats why they are used in 3-d computer graphics.

for more mathmatical information go:http://www.gamedev.net/reference/articles/article1095.asp

by tf

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Shoutbox

~4d ago

joreg: The summer season of vvvv workshops at The NODE Institute is out: https://thenodeinstitute.org/ss24-vvvv-intermediates/

~4d ago

domj: If you happen to be in Prague, come join us at the Schema workshop on Thursday 25.4. :) https://www.facebook.com/events/395516526614988/?ti=ls

~16d ago

joreg: Postponed: Next vvvv beginner course starting April 29: https://thenodeinstitute.org/courses/vvvv-beginner-class-summer-2024/

~1mth ago

~2mth ago

joreg: The Winter Season of vvvv workshops is now over but all recordings are still available for purchase: https://thenodeinstitute.org/ws23-vvvv-intermediates/