I have 2 vectors, U1 and V1 (from origin) in 3D space, together forming a plane P1. The vectors then both changes to U2 and V2 (still from origin) forming a new plane P2. Is there there a way to obtain the quaternion representing the rotation between P1 and P2?
Quaternion between 2 3D planes
1
$\begingroup$
quaternions
-
1From u1 and v1, the normal vector n1 of P1 can be obtained. From u2 and v2, the normal vector n2 of P2 can be obtained. The rotation between P1 and P2 actually is the rotation between n1 and n2. Given two vectors n1 and n2, we can find a rotation matrix R such that $n_2=Rn_1$. Then convert the rotation matrix to a quaternion. – 2011-08-18
-
0Thanks! So simple! I should have thought of that. Why not post it as an answer? Though from N1 and N2, one can obtain the Quaternion directly without going through a rotation matrix. – 2011-08-18
-
0That's better. I'm more familiar with rotation matrices than quaternion. But I know they can be converted to each other:) – 2011-08-19
-
0It's worth noting that this doesn't necessarily map the vectors $u_1$ and $v_1$ to $u_2$ and $v_2$ respectively. – 2011-08-19
-
0Hmm... you're right. Is it possible to find a quaternion that maps correctly? – 2011-08-22
1 Answers
2
I'll just post the full answer thanks to Shiyu in the comments. I'm an engineer and programmer, so the writing is probably not the way a mathematician would want to read it.
N1 = U1.cross(V1)
N2 = U2.cross(V2)
N1.normalize(), N2.normalize()
Vector M = N1+N2
M.normalize()
Vector axis = M.cross(N2)
angle = M.dot(N2)
Quaternion q(w=angle, x=axis.x, y=axis.y, z=axis)
q.normalize()
-
0This works well when the plane is rotate about an arbitary rotation. But not when the plane is rotated about the normal vector. What I mean is U1/V1 and U2/V1 are different but lie still on the same plane. In this simple case the rotation would be the angle between U1/U2 or V1/V2. In the answers above this rotation is not calculated in. How can this calculated in? – 2012-11-12