How do I find the orthogonal projection of a point onto a plane
132 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Say I have a plane spanned by two vectors A and B. I have a point C=[x,y,z], I want to find the orthogonal projection of this point unto the plane spanned by the two vectors. How do I do this?
2 Comments
Andrew Newell
on 16 Mar 2015
That's a math question. If you tell us the formula, we can tell you how to implement it.
Accepted Answer
Torsten
on 23 Mar 2015
min: (x0+lambda*a0+mu*b0-x)^2 + (y0+lambda*a1+mu*b1-y)^2 + (z0+lambda*a2+mu*b2-z)^2
gives the distance squared from the point (x,y,z) to the plane
w=(x0,y0,z0)+lambda*(a0,a1,a2)+mu*(b0,b1,b2).
Differentiate the distance squared with respect to lambda and mu, set the partial derivatives to 0 and solve for lambda and mu.
If the result is lambda^, mu^, then
(x0,y0,z0)+(lambda^)*(a0,a1,a2)+(mu^)*(b0,b1,b2)
is the orthogonal projection of (x,y,z) onto the plane.
Best wishes
Torsten.
More Answers (2)
Noah
on 3 Oct 2019
This is an old post, but it deserves a simpler answer. Your plane is spanned by vectors A and B, but requires some point in the plane to be specified in 3D space. Call a point in the plane P. You can compute the normal (call it "n" and normalize it). Then the projection of C is given by translating C against the normal direction by an amount dot(C-P,n).
% compute the normal
n = cross(A, B) ;
n = n / sqrt(sum(n.^2)) ;
% project onto the plane
C_proj = C - dot(C - P, n) * n
3 Comments
Nadezhda Lapina
on 7 May 2021
Edited: Nadezhda Lapina
on 7 May 2021
P is any point that belongs to the plane
canadarunner
on 15 May 2024
The vectorized version would be simply just
C_proj = C - (C - P) * n' * n;
0 Comments
See Also
Categories
Find more on Project Setup in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!