Prove Anti-Commutative Law for Cross Product

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SUMMARY

The anti-commutative law for the cross product states that for any two vectors a and b, the equation a * b = -(b * a) holds true. This law is fundamental in vector algebra, distinguishing the cross product from the dot product, which is commutative. The anti-commutative property implies that reversing the order of the vectors results in the negative of the original product. Understanding this law is essential for anyone working with vector operations in physics and engineering.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of vector algebra
  • Familiarity with cross product and dot product operations
  • Basic knowledge of mathematical functions and properties
  • Concept of commutativity and anti-commutativity
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  • Study the properties of vector operations in 3D space
  • Learn about the geometric interpretation of the cross product
  • Explore applications of the anti-commutative law in physics
  • Investigate other mathematical functions and their commutative properties
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Students of mathematics, physics, and engineering, as well as professionals working with vector calculations and operations in computational fields.

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Prove that anti-commutative law for the cross product: a * b = -(b * a)

The question looks easy enough except that I can not find a definition of the anti-commutative law anywhere.

I can find countless references to it but not a single definition. Can some one give me a run down on what the law entails?

Thanks
 
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You wrote out the definition in the first line. * is anticommutative if a*b=-b*a for all a,b.
 
ND3G said:
Prove that anti-commutative law for the cross product: a * b = -(b * a)

The question looks easy enough except that I can not find a definition of the anti-commutative law anywhere.

I can find countless references to it but not a single definition. Can some one give me a run down on what the law entails?

Thanks

The law is directly stated in the question!
It just says that if you reverse the order of the two vectors, you get minus one times the original result.

In genreal, consider an operation "F" that takes two quantities a and b as input and spits out a certain result. Let's write this as F[a,b] = R
(the result R could be a number, a vector, a matrix, whatever).
Is this function is antimmutative, it means that

F[b,a] = - F[a,b]

The dot product is commutative (switching the order of the two vectors multiplied gives the same result) whereas the cross product is anticommutative. Of course, a general function of two arguments does not have to be either commutative or anticommutative.
 

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