When I have two orientation quaternions, how do I find the rotation quaternion needed to go from one to the other?

Sindre picture Sindre · Jan 8, 2012 · Viewed 9.6k times · Source

I'm using quaternions in my game, and I'm wondering how, when I have two orientation quaternions, I can get the rotation quaternion needed to go from the first one, q1, to the second one, q2. I'm self taught, so there may be obvious solutions missing from my vocabulary.

In equations, what I'm doing when I rotate from the first one to the other is as follows: q2 = r * q1

However, now r is the unknown. Do the rules of algebra count here too? If that's the case, I'd end up dividing a quaternion by another, something I can't find a good explanation for on the internet.

I'm using a program called game maker

Answer

JCooper picture JCooper · Jan 9, 2012

In order to "divide" with a quaternion, you invert it so that it's the opposite rotation. In order to invert a quaternion, you negate either the w component or the (x, y, z) components, but not both since that would leave you with the same quaternion you started with (a fully negated quaternion represents the same rotation).

Then, remember that quaternions aren't commutative. So:

q2 = r*q1
q2*q1' = r

Where q1' is the inverted quaternion and it must be multiplied on the right side of q2 to get the right result.