Two subspaces are orthogonal when all vectors and in them satisfy the fundamental condition of orthogonality.

Conditions

  • Orthogonality is impossible when the dimension of the two compared spaces is larger than the dimension of the space they both are in

Orthogonality of the four fundamental Subspaces

Orthogonality of two planes in

While the normal vectors of two planes (Two walls meeting in the corner of a 3D room for example) must are orthogonal, their subspaces are not because they contain vectors that satisfy . Just don’t confuse the normal vector with the subspace vectors themselves.