Affine transformation

An image of a fern that exhibits affine self-similarity

In geometry, an affine transformation or affine map or an affinity (from the Latin, affinis, "connected with") between two vector spaces (strictly speaking, two affine spaces) consists of a linear transformation followed by a translation:

x \mapsto A x+ b.

In the finite-dimensional case each affine transformation is given by a matrix A and a vector b, satisfying certain properties described below.

Geometrically, an affine transformation in Euclidean space is one that preserves

  1. The collinearity relation between points; i.e., three points which lie on a line continue to be collinear after the transformation
  2. Ratios of distances along a line; i.e., for distinct collinear points p_1, p_2, p_3, the ratio |p_2-p_1| / |p_3-p_2| is preserved

In general, an affine transformation is composed of linear transformations (rotation, scaling or shear) and a translation (or "shift"). Several linear transformations can be combined into a single one, so that the general formula given above is still applicable.

In the one-dimensional case, A and b are called, respectively, slope and intercept.

Contents

Representation

Ordinary vector algebra uses matrix multiplication to represent linear transformations, and vector addition to represent translations. Using an augmented matrix, it is possible to represent both using matrix multiplication. The technique requires that all vectors are augmented with a "1" at the end, and all matrices are augmented with an extra row of zeros at the bottom, an extra column—the translation vector—to the right, and a "1" in the lower right corner. If A is a matrix,


\begin{bmatrix} \vec{y} \\ 1 \end{bmatrix} = \begin{bmatrix} A & \vec{b} \ \\ 0, \ldots, 0 & 1 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \vec{x} \\ 1 \end{bmatrix}

is equivalent to the following


\vec{y} = A \vec{x} + \vec{b}.

This representation exhibits the set of all invertible affine transformations as the semidirect product of Kn and GL(n, k). This is a group under the operation of composition of functions, called the affine group.

Ordinary matrix-vector multiplication always maps the origin to the origin, and could therefore never represent a translation, in which the origin must necessarily be mapped to some other point. By appending a "1" to every vector, one essentially considers the space to be mapped as a subset of a space with an additional dimension. In that space, the original space occupies the subset in which the final index is 1. Thus the origin of the original space can be found at (0,0, ... 0, 1). A translation within the original space by means of a linear transformation of the higher-dimensional space is then possible (specifically, a shear transformation). This is an example of homogeneous coordinates.

The advantage of using homogeneous coordinates is that one can combine any number of affine transformations into one by multiplying the matrices. This device is used extensively by graphics software.

Properties

An affine transformation is invertible if and only if A is invertible. In the matrix representation, the inverse is:


\begin{bmatrix} A^{-1} & -A^{-1}\vec{b} \ \\ 0,\ldots,0 & 1 \end{bmatrix}

The invertible affine transformations form the affine group, which has the general linear group of degree n as subgroup and is itself a subgroup of the general linear group of degree n + 1.

The similarity transformations form the subgroup where A is a scalar times an orthogonal matrix. If and only if the determinant of A is 1 or −1 then the transformation preserves area; these also form a subgroup. Combining both conditions we have the isometries, the subgroup of both where A is an orthogonal matrix.

Each of these groups has a subgroup of transformations which preserve orientation: those where the determinant of A is positive. In the last case this is in 3D the group of rigid body motions (proper rotations and pure translations).

For any matrix A the following propositions are equivalent:

If there is a fixed point, we can take that as the origin, and the affine transformation reduces to a linear transformation. This may make it easier to classify and understand the transformation. For example, describing a transformation as a rotation by a certain angle with respect to a certain axis is easier to get an idea of the overall behavior of the transformation than describing it as a combination of a translation and a rotation. However, this depends on application and context. Describing such a transformation for an object tends to make more sense in terms of rotation about an axis through the center of that object, combined with a translation, rather than by just a rotation with respect to some distant point. As an example: "move 200 m north and rotate 90° anti-clockwise", rather than the equivalent "with respect to the point 141 m to the northwest, rotate 90° anti-clockwise".

Affine transformations in 2D without fixed point (so where A has eigenvalue 1) are:

Affine transformation of the plane

To visualise the general affine transformation of the Euclidean plane, take labelled parallelograms ABCD and A′B′C′D′. Whatever the choices of points, there is an affine transformation T of the plane taking A to A′, and each vertex similarly. Supposing we exclude the degenerate case where ABCD has zero area, there is a unique such affine transformation T. Drawing out a whole grid of parallelograms based on ABCD, the image T(P) of any point P is determined by noting that T(A) = A′, T applied to the line segment AB is A′B′, T applied to the line segment AC is A′C′, and T respects scalar multiples of vectors based at A. [If A, E, F are collinear then the ratio length(AF)/length(AE) is equal to length(AF′)/length(AE′).] Geometrically T transforms the grid based on ABCD to that based in A′B′C′D′.

Affine transformations don't respect lengths or angles; they multiply area by a constant factor

area of A′ B′ C′ D′ / area of ABCD.

A given T may either be direct (respect orientation), or indirect (reverse orientation), and this may be determined by its effect on signed areas (as defined, for example, by the cross product of vectors).

Example of an affine transformation

The following equation expresses an affine transformation in GF(2) (with "+" representing XOR):


\{\,a'\,\} = M\{\,a\,\} + \{\,v\,\},

where [M] is the matrix


\begin{bmatrix}
1&0&0&0&1&1&1&1 \\
1&1&0&0&0&1&1&1 \\
1&1&1&0&0&0&1&1 \\
1&1&1&1&0&0&0&1 \\
1&1&1&1&1&0&0&0 \\
0&1&1&1&1&1&0&0 \\
0&0&1&1&1&1&1&0 \\
0&0&0&1&1&1&1&1
\end{bmatrix}

and {v} is the vector


\begin{bmatrix} 1 \\ 1 \\ 0 \\ 0 \\ 0 \\ 1 \\ 1 \\ 0 \end{bmatrix}.

For instance, the affine transformation of the element {a} = x7 + x6 + x3 + x = {11001010} in big-endian binary notation = {CA} in big-endian hexadecimal notation, is calculated as follows:

a_0' = a_0 \oplus a_4 \oplus a_5 \oplus a_6 \oplus a_7 \oplus 1 = 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 = 1
a_1' = a_0 \oplus a_1 \oplus a_5 \oplus a_6 \oplus a_7 \oplus 1 = 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 = 0
a_2' = a_0 \oplus a_1 \oplus a_2 \oplus a_6 \oplus a_7 \oplus 0 = 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 = 1
a_3' = a_0 \oplus a_1 \oplus a_2 \oplus a_3 \oplus a_7 \oplus 0 = 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 = 1
a_4' = a_0 \oplus a_1 \oplus a_2 \oplus a_3 \oplus a_4 \oplus 0 = 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 = 0
a_5' = a_1 \oplus a_2 \oplus a_3 \oplus a_4 \oplus a_5 \oplus 1 = 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 = 1
a_6' = a_2 \oplus a_3 \oplus a_4 \oplus a_5 \oplus a_6 \oplus 1 = 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 = 1
a_7' = a_3 \oplus a_4 \oplus a_5 \oplus a_6 \oplus a_7 \oplus 0 = 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 = 1.

Thus, {a′} = x7 + x6 + x5 + x3 + x2 + 1 = {11101101} = {ED}.

See also

External links