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In three-dimensional geometry, skew lines are two lines that do not intersect and are not parallel. A simple example of a pair of skew lines is the pair of lines through opposite edges of a
regular tetrahedron In geometry, a tetrahedron (: tetrahedra or tetrahedrons), also known as a triangular pyramid, is a polyhedron composed of four triangular Face (geometry), faces, six straight Edge (geometry), edges, and four vertex (geometry), vertices. The tet ...
. Two lines that both lie in the same plane must either cross each other or be parallel, so skew lines can exist only in three or more
dimension In physics and mathematics, the dimension of a mathematical space (or object) is informally defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify any point within it. Thus, a line has a dimension of one (1D) because only one coo ...
s. Two lines are skew if and only if they are not coplanar.


General position

If four points are chosen at random uniformly within a unit
cube A cube or regular hexahedron is a three-dimensional space, three-dimensional solid object in geometry, which is bounded by six congruent square (geometry), square faces, a type of polyhedron. It has twelve congruent edges and eight vertices. It i ...
, they will almost surely define a pair of skew lines. After the first three points have been chosen, the fourth point will define a non-skew line if, and only if, it is coplanar with the first three points. However, the plane through the first three points forms a subset of measure zero of the cube, and the probability that the fourth point lies on this plane is zero. If it does not, the lines defined by the points will be skew. Similarly, in three-dimensional space a very small perturbation of any two parallel or intersecting lines will almost certainly turn them into skew lines. Therefore, any four points in general position always form skew lines. In this sense, skew lines are the "usual" case, and parallel or intersecting lines are special cases.


Formulas


Testing for skewness

:V=\frac\left, \det\left begin\mathbf-\mathbf \\ \mathbf-\mathbf \\ \mathbf-\mathbf \end\right.


Nearest points

Expressing the two lines as vectors: :\text \; \mathbf=\mathbf+t_1\mathbf :\text \; \mathbf=\mathbf+t_2\mathbf The
cross product In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here E), and ...
of \mathbf and \mathbf is perpendicular to the lines. : \mathbf= \mathbf \times \mathbf The plane formed by the translations of Line 2 along \mathbf contains the point \mathbf and is perpendicular to \mathbf= \mathbf \times \mathbf. Therefore, the intersecting point of Line 1 with the above-mentioned plane, which is also the point on Line 1 that is nearest to Line 2 is given by : \mathbf=\mathbf+ \frac \mathbf Similarly, the point on Line 2 nearest to Line 1 is given by (where \mathbf= \mathbf \times \mathbf ) : \mathbf=\mathbf+ \frac \mathbf


Distance

The nearest points \mathbf and \mathbf form the shortest line segment joining Line 1 and Line 2: : d = \Vert \mathbf - \mathbf \Vert. The distance between nearest points in two skew lines may also be expressed using other vectors: : \mathbf = \mathbf + \lambda \mathbf; : \mathbf = \mathbf + \mu \mathbf. Here the 1×3 vector represents an arbitrary point on the line through particular point with representing the direction of the line and with the value of the real number \lambda determining where the point is on the line, and similarly for arbitrary point on the line through particular point in direction . The
cross product In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here E), and ...
of b and d is perpendicular to the lines, as is the
unit vector In mathematics, a unit vector in a normed vector space is a Vector (mathematics and physics), vector (often a vector (geometry), spatial vector) of Norm (mathematics), length 1. A unit vector is often denoted by a lowercase letter with a circumfle ...
: \mathbf = \frac The perpendicular distance between the lines is then : d = , \mathbf \cdot (\mathbf - \mathbf), . (if , b × d, is zero the lines are parallel and this method cannot be used).


More than two lines


Configurations

A ''configuration'' of skew lines is a set of lines in which all pairs are skew. Two configurations are said to be ''isotopic'' if it is possible to continuously transform one configuration into the other, maintaining throughout the transformation the invariant that all pairs of lines remain skew. Any two configurations of two lines are easily seen to be isotopic, and configurations of the same number of lines in dimensions higher than three are always isotopic, but there exist multiple non-isotopic configurations of three or more lines in three dimensions. The number of nonisotopic configurations of ''n'' lines in R3, starting at ''n'' = 1, is :1, 1, 2, 3, 7, 19, 74, ... .


Ruled surfaces

An
affine transformation In Euclidean geometry, an affine transformation or affinity (from the Latin, '' affinis'', "connected with") is a geometric transformation that preserves lines and parallelism, but not necessarily Euclidean distances and angles. More general ...
of this ruled surface produces a surface which in general has an elliptical cross-section rather than the circular cross-section produced by rotating L around L'; such surfaces are also called hyperboloids of one sheet, and again are ruled by two families of mutually skew lines. A third type of ruled surface is the hyperbolic paraboloid. Like the hyperboloid of one sheet, the hyperbolic paraboloid has two families of skew lines; in each of the two families the lines are parallel to a common plane although not to each other. Any three skew lines in R3 lie on exactly one ruled surface of one of these types.


Gallucci's theorem

If three skew lines all meet three other skew lines, any transversal of the first set of three meets any transversal of the second set.


Skew flats in higher dimensions

In higher-dimensional space, a flat of dimension ''k'' is referred to as a ''k''-flat. Thus, a line may also be called a 1-flat. Generalizing the concept of ''skew lines'' to ''d''-dimensional space, an ''i''-flat and a ''j''-flat may be skew if . As with lines in 3-space, skew flats are those that are neither parallel nor intersect. In affine ''d''-space, two flats of any dimension may be parallel. However, in projective space, parallelism does not exist; two flats must either intersect or be skew. Let be the set of points on an ''i''-flat, and let be the set of points on a ''j''-flat. In projective ''d''-space, if then the intersection of and must contain a (''i''+''j''−''d'')-flat. (A ''0''-flat is a point.) In either geometry, if and intersect at a ''k''-flat, for , then the points of determine a (''i''+''j''−''k'')-flat.


See also

* Distance between two parallel lines * Petersen–Morley theorem


References


External links

*{{mathworld, urlname=SkewLines, title=Skew Lines, mode=cs2 Elementary geometry Euclidean solid geometry Multilinear algebra Orientation (geometry) Line (geometry)