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Spherical coordinate system

In mathematics, a spherical coordinate system is a coordinate system for three-dimensional space where the position of a given point in space is specified by three numbers, (r, θ, φ): the radial distance of the radial line r connecting the point to the fixed point of origin (which is located on a fixed polar axis, or zenith direction axis, or z-axis); the polar angle θ of the radial line r; and the azimuthal angle φ of the radial line r.

The physics convention. Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as commonly used: (ISO 80000-2:2019): radial distance r (slant distance to origin), polar angle θ (theta) (angle with respect to positive polar axis), and azimuthal angle φ (phi) (angle of rotation from the initial meridian plane). This is the convention followed in this article.

The polar angle θ is measured between the z-axis and the radial line r. The azimuthal angle φ is measured between the orthogonal projection of the radial line r onto the reference x-y-plane—which is orthogonal to the z-axis and passes through the fixed point of origin—and either of the fixed x-axis or y-axis, both of which are orthogonal to the z-axis and to each other. (See graphic re the "physics convention".)

Once the radius is fixed, the three coordinates (r, θ, φ), known as a 3-tuple, provide a coordinate system on a sphere, typically called the spherical polar coordinates. Nota bene: the physics convention is followed in this article; (See both graphics re "physics convention" and re "mathematics convention").

The radial distance from the fixed point of origin is also called the radius, or radial line, or radial coordinate. The polar angle may be called inclination angle, zenith angle, normal angle, or the colatitude. The user may choose to ignore the inclination angle and use the elevation angle instead, which is measured upward between the reference plane and the radial line—i.e., from the reference plane upward (towards to the positive z-axis) to the radial line. The depression angle is the negative of the elevation angle. (See graphic re the "physics convention"—not "mathematics convention".)

Both the use of symbols and the naming order of tuple coordinates differ among the several sources and disciplines. This article will use the ISO convention[1] frequently encountered in physics, where the naming tuple gives the order as: radial distance, polar angle, azimuthal angle, or . (See graphic re the "physics convention".) In contrast, the conventions in many mathematics books and texts give the naming order differently as: radial distance, "azimuthal angle", "polar angle", and or —which switches the uses and meanings of symbols θ and φ. Other conventions may also be used, such as r for a radius from the z-axis that is not from the point of origin. Particular care must be taken to check the meaning of the symbols.

The mathematics convention. Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as typically used: radial distance r, azimuthal angle θ, and polar angle φ. + The meanings of θ and φ have been swapped—compared to the physics convention. The 'south'-direction x-axis is depicted but the 'north'-direction x-axis is not. (As in physics, ρ (rho) is often used instead of r to avoid confusion with the value r in cylindrical and 2D polar coordinates.)

According to the conventions of geographical coordinate systems, positions are measured by latitude, longitude, and height (altitude). There are a number of celestial coordinate systems based on different fundamental planes and with different terms for the various coordinates. The spherical coordinate systems used in mathematics normally use radians rather than degrees; (note 90 degrees equals π/2 radians). And these systems of the mathematics convention may measure the azimuthal angle counterclockwise (i.e., from the south direction x-axis, or 180°, towards the east direction y-axis, or +90°)—rather than measure clockwise (i.e., from the north direction x-axis, or 0°, towards the east direction y-axis, or +90°), as done in the horizontal coordinate system.[2] (See graphic re "mathematics convention".)

The spherical coordinate system of the physics convention can be seen as a generalization of the polar coordinate system in three-dimensional space. It can be further extended to higher-dimensional spaces, and is then referred to as a hyperspherical coordinate system.

Definition edit

To define a spherical coordinate system, one must designate an origin point in space, O, and two orthogonal directions: the zenith reference direction and the azimuth reference direction. These choices determine a reference plane that is typically defined as containing the point of origin and the x– and y–axes, either of which may be designated as the azimuth reference direction. The reference plane is perpendicular (orthogonal) to the zenith direction, and typically is desiginated "horizontal" to the zenith direction's "vertical". The spherical coordinates of a point P then are defined as follows:

  • The radius or radial distance is the Euclidean distance from the origin O to P.
  • The inclination (or polar angle) is the signed angle from the zenith reference direction to the line segment OP. (Elevation may be used as the polar angle instead of inclination; see below.)
  • The azimuth (or azimuthal angle) is the signed angle measured from the azimuth reference direction to the orthogonal projection of the radial line segment OP on the reference plane.

The sign of the azimuth is determined by designating the rotation that is the positive sense of turning about the zenith. This choice is arbitrary, and is part of the coordinate system definition. (If the inclination is either zero or 180 degrees (= π radians), the azimuth is arbitrary. If the radius is zero, both azimuth and inclination are arbitrary.)

The elevation is the signed angle from the x-y reference plane to the radial line segment OP, where positive angles are designated as upward, towards the zenith reference. Elevation is 90 degrees (= π/2 radians) minus inclination. Thus, if the inclination is 60 degrees (= π/3 radians), then the elevation is 30 degrees (= π/6 radians).

In linear algebra, the vector from the origin O to the point P is often called the position vector of P.

Conventions edit

Several different conventions exist for representing spherical coordinates and prescribing the naming order of their symbols. The 3-tuple number set   denotes radial distance, the polar angle—"inclination", or as the alternative, "elevation"—and the azimuthal angle. It is the common practice within the physics convention, as specified by ISO standard 80000-2:2019, and earlier in ISO 31-11 (1992).

As stated above, this article describes the ISO "physics convention"—unless otherwise noted.

However, some authors (including mathematicians) use the symbol ρ (rho) for radius, or radial distance, φ for inclination (or elevation) and θ for azimuth—while others keep the use of r for the radius; all which "provides a logical extension of the usual polar coordinates notation".[3] As to order, some authors list the azimuth before the inclination (or the elevation) angle. Some combinations of these choices result in a left-handed coordinate system. The standard "physics convention" 3-tuple set   conflicts with the usual notation for two-dimensional polar coordinates and three-dimensional cylindrical coordinates, where θ is often used for the azimuth.[3]

Angles are typically measured in degrees (°) or in radians (rad), where 360° = 2π rad. The use of degrees is most common in geography, astronomy, and engineering, where radians are commonly used in mathematics and theoretical physics. The unit for radial distance is usually determined by the context, as occurs in applications of the 'unit sphere', see applications.

When the system is used to designate physical three-space, it is customary to assign positive to azimuth angles measured in the counterclockwise sense from the reference direction on the reference plane—as seen from the "zenith" side of the plane. This convention is used in particular for geographical coordinates, where the "zenith" direction is north and the positive azimuth (longitude) angles are measured eastwards from some prime meridian.

Major conventions
coordinates set order corresponding local geographical directions
(Z, X, Y)
right/left-handed
(r, θinc, φaz,right) (U, S, E) right
(r, φaz,right, θel) (U, E, N) right
(r, θel, φaz,right) (U, N, E) left

Note: Easting (E), Northing (N), Upwardness (U). In the case of (U, S, E) the local azimuth angle would be measured counterclockwise from S to E.

Unique coordinates edit

Any spherical coordinate triplet (or tuple)   specifies a single point of three-dimensional space. On the reverse view, any single point has infinitely many equivalent spherical coordinates. That is, the user can add or subtract any number of full turns to the angular measures without changing the angles themselves, and therefore without changing the point. It is convenient in many contexts to use negative radial distances, the convention being  , which is equivalent to   for any r, θ, and φ. Moreover,   is equivalent to  .

When necessary to define a unique set of spherical coordinates for each point, the user must restrict the range, aka interval, of each coordinate. A common choice is:

  • radial distance: r ≥ 0,
  • polar angle: 0° ≤ θ ≤ 180°, or 0 rad ≤ θπ rad,
  • azimuth : 0° ≤ φ < 360°, or 0 rad ≤ φ < 2π rad.

But instead of the interval [0°, 360°), the azimuth φ is typically restricted to the half-open interval (−180°, +180°], or (−π, +π ] radians, which is the standard convention for geographic longitude.

For the polar angle θ, the range (interval) for inclination is [0°, 180°], which is equivalent to elevation range (interval) [−90°, +90°]. In geography, the latitude is the elevation.

Even with these restrictions, if the polar angle (inclination) is 0° or 180°—elevation is −90° or +90°—then the azimuth angle is arbitrary; and if r is zero, both azimuth and polar angles are arbitrary. To define the coordinates as unique, the user can assert the convention that (in these cases) the arbitrary coordinates are set to zero.

Plotting edit

To plot any dot from its spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ), where θ is inclination, the user would: move r units from the origin in the zenith reference direction (z-axis); then rotate by the amount of the azimuth angle (φ) about the origin from the designated azimuth reference direction, (i.e., either the x– or y–axis, see Definition, above); and then rotate from the z-axis by the amount of the θ angle.

Applications edit

 
In the mathematics convention: A globe showing a unit sphere, with tuple coordinates of point P (red): its radial distance r (red, not labeled); its azimuthal angle θ (not labeled); and its polar angle of inclination φ (not labeled). The radial distance upward along the zenith–axis from the point of origin to the surface of the sphere is assigned the value unity, or 1. + In this image, r appears to equal 4/6, or .67, (of unity); i.e., four of the six 'nested shells' to the surface. The azimuth angle θ appears to equal positive 90°, as rotated counterclockwise from the azimuth-reference x–axis; and the inclination φ appears to equal 30°, as rotated from the zenith–axis. (Note the 'full' rotation, or inclination, from the zenith–axis to the y–axis is 90°).

Just as the two-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system is useful—has a wide set of applications—on a planar surface, a two-dimensional spherical coordinate system is useful on the surface of a sphere. For example, one sphere that is described in Cartesian coordinates with the equation x2 + y2 + z2 = c2 can be described in spherical coordinates by the simple equation r = c. (In this system—shown here in the mathematics convention—the sphere is adapted as a unit sphere, where the radius is set to unity and then can generally be ignored, see graphic.)

This (unit sphere) simplification is also useful when dealing with objects such as rotational matrices. Spherical coordinates are also useful in analyzing systems that have some degree of symmetry about a point, including: volume integrals inside a sphere; the potential energy field surrounding a concentrated mass or charge; or global weather simulation in a planet's atmosphere.

 
The output pattern of the industrial loudspeaker shown here uses spherical polar plots taken at six frequencies

Three dimensional modeling of loudspeaker output patterns can be used to predict their performance. A number of polar plots are required, taken at a wide selection of frequencies, as the pattern changes greatly with frequency. Polar plots help to show that many loudspeakers tend toward omnidirectionality at lower frequencies.

An important application of spherical coordinates provides for the separation of variables in two partial differential equations—the Laplace and the Helmholtz equations—that arise in many physical problems.The angular portions of the solutions to such equations take the form of spherical harmonics. Another application is ergonomic design, where r is the arm length of a stationary person and the angles describe the direction of the arm as it reaches out. The spherical coordinate system is also commonly used in 3D game development to rotate the camera around the player's position[4]

In geography edit

Instead of inclination, the geographic coordinate system uses elevation angle (or latitude), in the range (aka domain) −90° ≤ φ ≤ 90° and rotated north from the equator plane. Latitude (i.e., the angle of latitude) may be either geocentric latitude, measured (rotated) from the Earth's center—and designated variously by ψ, q, φ′, φc, φg—or geodetic latitude, measured (rotated) from the observer's local vertical, and typically designated φ. The polar angle (inclination), which is 90° minus the latitude and ranges from 0 to 180°, is called colatitude in geography.

The azimuth angle (or longitude) of a given position on Earth, commonly denoted by λ, is measured in degrees east or west from some conventional reference meridian (most commonly the IERS Reference Meridian); thus its domain (or range) is −180° ≤ λ ≤ 180° and a given reading is typically designated "East" or "West". For positions on the Earth or other solid celestial body, the reference plane is usually taken to be the plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation.

Instead of the radial distance r geographers commonly use altitude above or below some local reference surface (vertical datum), which, for example, may be the mean sea level. When needed, the radial distance can be computed from the altitude by adding the radius of Earth, which is approximately 6,360 ± 11 km (3,952 ± 7 miles).

However, modern geographical coordinate systems are quite complex, and the positions implied by these simple formulae may be inaccurate by several kilometers. The precise standard meanings of latitude, longitude and altitude are currently defined by the World Geodetic System (WGS), and take into account the flattening of the Earth at the poles (about 21 km or 13 miles) and many other details.

Planetary coordinate systems use formulations analogous to the geographic coordinate system.

In astronomy edit

A series of astronomical coordinate systems are used to measure the elevation angle from several fundamental planes. These reference planes include: the observer's horizon, the galactic equator (defined by the rotation of the Milky Way), the celestial equator (defined by Earth's rotation), the plane of the ecliptic (defined by Earth's orbit around the Sun), and the plane of the earth terminator (normal to the instantaneous direction to the Sun).

Coordinate system conversions edit

As the spherical coordinate system is only one of many three-dimensional coordinate systems, there exist equations for converting coordinates between the spherical coordinate system and others.

Cartesian coordinates edit

The spherical coordinates of a point in the ISO convention (i.e. for physics: radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ) can be obtained from its Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z) by the formulae

 

The inverse tangent denoted in φ = arctan y/x must be suitably defined, taking into account the correct quadrant of (x, y). See the article on atan2.

Alternatively, the conversion can be considered as two sequential rectangular to polar conversions: the first in the Cartesian xy plane from (x, y) to (R, φ), where R is the projection of r onto the xy-plane, and the second in the Cartesian zR-plane from (z, R) to (r, θ). The correct quadrants for φ and θ are implied by the correctness of the planar rectangular to polar conversions.

These formulae assume that the two systems have the same origin, that the spherical reference plane is the Cartesian xy plane, that θ is inclination from the z direction, and that the azimuth angles are measured from the Cartesian x axis (so that the y axis has φ = +90°). If θ measures elevation from the reference plane instead of inclination from the zenith the arccos above becomes an arcsin, and the cos θ and sin θ below become switched.

Conversely, the Cartesian coordinates may be retrieved from the spherical coordinates (radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ), where r[0, ∞), θ[0, π], φ[0, 2π), by

 

Cylindrical coordinates edit

Cylindrical coordinates (axial radius ρ, azimuth φ, elevation z) may be converted into spherical coordinates (central radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ), by the formulas

 

Conversely, the spherical coordinates may be converted into cylindrical coordinates by the formulae

 

These formulae assume that the two systems have the same origin and same reference plane, measure the azimuth angle φ in the same senses from the same axis, and that the spherical angle θ is inclination from the cylindrical z axis.

Generalization edit

It is also possible to deal with ellipsoids in Cartesian coordinates by using a modified version of the spherical coordinates.

Let P be an ellipsoid specified by the level set

 

The modified spherical coordinates of a point in P in the ISO convention (i.e. for physics: radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ) can be obtained from its Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z) by the formulae

 

An infinitesimal volume element is given by

 

The square-root factor comes from the property of the determinant that allows a constant to be pulled out from a column:

 

Integration and differentiation in spherical coordinates edit

 
Unit vectors in spherical coordinates

The following equations (Iyanaga 1977) assume that the colatitude θ is the inclination from the positive z axis, as in the physics convention discussed.

The line element for an infinitesimal displacement from (r, θ, φ) to (r + dr, θ + dθ, φ + dφ) is

 
where
 
are the local orthogonal unit vectors in the directions of increasing r, θ, and φ, respectively, and , ŷ, and are the unit vectors in Cartesian coordinates. The linear transformation to this right-handed coordinate triplet is a rotation matrix,
 

This gives the transformation from the spherical to the cartesian, the other way around is given by its inverse. Note: the matrix is an orthogonal matrix, that is, its inverse is simply its transpose.

The Cartesian unit vectors are thus related to the spherical unit vectors by:

 

The general form of the formula to prove the differential line element, is[5]

 
that is, the change in   is decomposed into individual changes corresponding to changes in the individual coordinates.

To apply this to the present case, one needs to calculate how   changes with each of the coordinates. In the conventions used,

 

Thus,

 

The desired coefficients are the magnitudes of these vectors:[5]

 

The surface element spanning from θ to θ + dθ and φ to φ + dφ on a spherical surface at (constant) radius r is then

 

Thus the differential solid angle is

 

The surface element in a surface of polar angle θ constant (a cone with vertex at the origin) is

 

The surface element in a surface of azimuth φ constant (a vertical half-plane) is

 

The volume element spanning from r to r + dr, θ to θ + dθ, and φ to φ + dφ is specified by the determinant of the Jacobian matrix of partial derivatives,

 
namely
 

Thus, for example, a function f(r, θ, φ) can be integrated over every point in R3 by the triple integral

 

The del operator in this system leads to the following expressions for the gradient and Laplacian for scalar fields,

 
And it leads to the following expressions for the divergence and curl of vector fields,
 
 

Further, the inverse Jacobian in Cartesian coordinates is

 
The metric tensor in the spherical coordinate system is  .

Distance in spherical coordinates edit

In spherical coordinates, given two points with φ being the azimuthal coordinate

 
The distance between the two points can be expressed as[6]
 

Kinematics edit

In spherical coordinates, the position of a point or particle (although better written as a triple ) can be written as[7]

 
Its velocity is then[7]
 
and its acceleration is[7]
 

The angular momentum is

 
Where   is mass. In the case of a constant φ or else θ = π/2, this reduces to vector calculus in polar coordinates.

The corresponding angular momentum operator then follows from the phase-space reformulation of the above,

 

The torque is given as[7]

 

The kinetic energy is given as[7]

 

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "ISO 80000-2:2019 Quantities and units – Part 2: Mathematics". ISO. 19 May 2020. pp. 20–21. Item no. 2-17.3. Retrieved 2020-08-12.
  2. ^ Duffett-Smith, P and Zwart, J, p. 34.
  3. ^ a b Eric W. Weisstein (2005-10-26). "Spherical Coordinates". MathWorld. Retrieved 2010-01-15.
  4. ^ "Video Game Math: Polar and Spherical Notation". Academy of Interactive Entertainment (AIE). Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  5. ^ a b "Line element (dl) in spherical coordinates derivation/diagram". Stack Exchange. October 21, 2011.
  6. ^ https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/833002/distance-between-two-points-in-spherical-coordinates
  7. ^ a b c d e Reed, Bruce Cameron (2019). Keplerian ellipses : the physics of the gravitational two-body problem. Morgan & Claypool Publishers, Institute of Physics. San Rafael [California] (40 Oak Drive, San Rafael, CA, 94903, US). ISBN 978-1-64327-470-6. OCLC 1104053368.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Bibliography edit

  • Iyanaga, Shōkichi; Kawada, Yukiyosi (1977). Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mathematics. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262090162.
  • Morse PM, Feshbach H (1953). Methods of Theoretical Physics, Part I. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 658. ISBN 0-07-043316-X. LCCN 52011515.
  • Margenau H, Murphy GM (1956). The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry. New York: D. van Nostrand. pp. 177–178. LCCN 55010911.
  • Korn GA, Korn TM (1961). Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 174–175. LCCN 59014456. ASIN B0000CKZX7.
  • Sauer R, Szabó I (1967). Mathematische Hilfsmittel des Ingenieurs. New York: Springer Verlag. pp. 95–96. LCCN 67025285.
  • Moon P, Spencer DE (1988). "Spherical Coordinates (r, θ, ψ)". Field Theory Handbook, Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations, and Their Solutions (corrected 2nd ed., 3rd print ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 24–27 (Table 1.05). ISBN 978-0-387-18430-2.
  • Duffett-Smith P, Zwart J (2011). Practical Astronomy with your Calculator or Spreadsheet, 4th Edition. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0521146548.

External links edit

  • "Spherical coordinates", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • MathWorld description of spherical coordinates
  • Coordinate Converter – converts between polar, Cartesian and spherical coordinates

spherical, coordinate, system, mathematics, spherical, coordinate, system, coordinate, system, three, dimensional, space, where, position, given, point, space, specified, three, numbers, radial, distance, radial, line, connecting, point, fixed, point, origin, . In mathematics a spherical coordinate system is a coordinate system for three dimensional space where the position of a given point in space is specified by three numbers r 8 f the radial distance of the radial line r connecting the point to the fixed point of origin which is located on a fixed polar axis or zenith direction axis or z axis the polar angle 8 of the radial line r and theazimuthal angle fof theradial line r The physics convention Spherical coordinates r 8 f as commonly used ISO 80000 2 2019 radial distance r slant distance to origin polar angle 8 theta angle with respect to positive polar axis and azimuthal angle f phi angle of rotation from the initial meridian plane This is the convention followed in this article The polar angle 8 is measured between the z axis and the radial line r The azimuthal angle f is measured between the orthogonal projection of the radial line r onto the reference x y plane which is orthogonal to the z axis and passes through the fixed point of origin and either of the fixed x axis or y axis both of which are orthogonal to the z axis and to each other See graphic re the physics convention Once the radius is fixed the three coordinates r 8 f known as a 3 tuple provide a coordinate system on a sphere typically called the spherical polar coordinates Nota bene the physics convention is followed in this article See both graphics re physics convention and re mathematics convention The radial distance from the fixed point of origin is also called the radius or radial line or radial coordinate The polar angle may be called inclination angle zenith angle normal angle or the colatitude The user may choose to ignore the inclination angle and use the elevation angle instead which is measured upward between the reference plane and the radial line i e from the reference plane upward towards to the positive z axis to the radial line The depression angle is the negative of the elevation angle See graphic re the physics convention not mathematics convention Both the use of symbols and the naming order of tuple coordinates differ among the several sources and disciplines This article will use the ISO convention 1 frequently encountered in physics where the naming tuple gives the order as radial distance polar angle azimuthal angle or r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi See graphic re the physics convention In contrast the conventions in many mathematics books and texts give the naming order differently as radial distance azimuthal angle polar angle and r 8 f displaystyle rho theta varphi or r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi which switches the uses and meanings of symbols 8 and f Other conventions may also be used such as r for a radius from the z axis that is not from the point of origin Particular care must be taken to check the meaning of the symbols The mathematics convention Spherical coordinates r 8 f as typically used radial distance r azimuthal angle 8 and polar angle f The meanings of 8 and f have been swapped compared to the physics convention The south direction x axis is depicted but the north direction x axis is not As in physics r rho is often used instead of r to avoid confusion with the value r in cylindrical and 2D polar coordinates According to the conventions of geographical coordinate systems positions are measured by latitude longitude and height altitude There are a number of celestial coordinate systems based on different fundamental planes and with different terms for the various coordinates The spherical coordinate systems used in mathematics normally use radians rather than degrees note 90 degrees equals p 2 radians And these systems of the mathematics convention may measure the azimuthal angle counterclockwise i e from the south direction x axis or 180 towards the east direction y axis or 90 rather than measure clockwise i e from the north direction x axis or 0 towards the east direction y axis or 90 as done in the horizontal coordinate system 2 See graphic re mathematics convention The spherical coordinate system of the physics convention can be seen as a generalization of the polar coordinate system in three dimensional space It can be further extended to higher dimensional spaces and is then referred to as a hyperspherical coordinate system Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Conventions 1 2 Unique coordinates 1 3 Plotting 2 Applications 2 1 In geography 2 2 In astronomy 3 Coordinate system conversions 3 1 Cartesian coordinates 3 2 Cylindrical coordinates 4 Generalization 5 Integration and differentiation in spherical coordinates 6 Distance in spherical coordinates 7 Kinematics 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Bibliography 11 External linksDefinition editTo define a spherical coordinate system one must designate an origin point in space O and two orthogonal directions the zenith reference direction and the azimuth reference direction These choices determine a reference plane that is typically defined as containing the point of origin and the x and y axes either of which may be designated as the azimuth reference direction The reference plane is perpendicular orthogonal to the zenith direction and typically is desiginated horizontal to the zenith direction s vertical The spherical coordinates of a point P then are defined as follows The radius or radial distance is the Euclidean distance from the origin O to P The inclination or polar angle is the signed angle from the zenith reference direction to the line segment OP Elevation may be used as the polar angle instead of inclination see below The azimuth or azimuthal angle is the signed angle measured from the azimuth reference direction to the orthogonal projection of the radial line segment OP on the reference plane The sign of the azimuth is determined by designating the rotation that is the positive sense of turning about the zenith This choice is arbitrary and is part of the coordinate system definition If the inclination is either zero or 180 degrees p radians the azimuth is arbitrary If the radius is zero both azimuth and inclination are arbitrary The elevation is the signed angle from the x y reference plane to the radial line segment OP where positive angles are designated as upward towards the zenith reference Elevation is 90 degrees p 2 radians minus inclination Thus if the inclination is 60 degrees p 3 radians then the elevation is 30 degrees p 6 radians In linear algebra the vector from the origin O to the point P is often called the position vector of P Conventions edit Several different conventions exist for representing spherical coordinates and prescribing the naming order of their symbols The 3 tuple number set r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp denotes radial distance the polar angle inclination or as the alternative elevation and the azimuthal angle It is the common practice within the physics convention as specified by ISO standard 80000 2 2019 and earlier in ISO 31 11 1992 As stated above this article describes the ISO physics convention unless otherwise noted However some authors including mathematicians use the symbol r rho for radius or radial distance f for inclination or elevation and 8 for azimuth while others keep the use of r for the radius all which provides a logical extension of the usual polar coordinates notation 3 As to order some authors list the azimuth before the inclination or the elevation angle Some combinations of these choices result in a left handed coordinate system The standard physics convention 3 tuple set r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp conflicts with the usual notation for two dimensional polar coordinates and three dimensional cylindrical coordinates where 8 is often used for the azimuth 3 Angles are typically measured in degrees or in radians rad where 360 2p rad The use of degrees is most common in geography astronomy and engineering where radians are commonly used in mathematics and theoretical physics The unit for radial distance is usually determined by the context as occurs in applications of the unit sphere see applications When the system is used to designate physical three space it is customary to assign positive to azimuth angles measured in the counterclockwise sense from the reference direction on the reference plane as seen from the zenith side of the plane This convention is used in particular for geographical coordinates where the zenith direction is north and the positive azimuth longitude angles are measured eastwards from some prime meridian Major conventions coordinates set order corresponding local geographical directions Z X Y right left handed r 8inc faz right U S E right r faz right 8el U E N right r 8el faz right U N E left Note Easting E Northing N Upwardness U In the case of U S E the local azimuth angle would be measured counterclockwise from S to E Unique coordinates edit Any spherical coordinate triplet or tuple r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp specifies a single point of three dimensional space On the reverse view any single point has infinitely many equivalent spherical coordinates That is the user can add or subtract any number of full turns to the angular measures without changing the angles themselves and therefore without changing the point It is convenient in many contexts to use negative radial distances the convention being r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp which is equivalent to r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp for any r 8 and f Moreover r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp is equivalent to r 8 f 180 displaystyle r theta varphi 180 circ nbsp When necessary to define a unique set of spherical coordinates for each point the user must restrict the range aka interval of each coordinate A common choice is radial distance r 0 polar angle 0 8 180 or 0 rad 8 p rad azimuth 0 f lt 360 or 0 rad f lt 2p rad But instead of the interval 0 360 the azimuth f is typically restricted to the half open interval 180 180 or p p radians which is the standard convention for geographic longitude For the polar angle 8 the range interval for inclination is 0 180 which is equivalent to elevation range interval 90 90 In geography the latitude is the elevation Even with these restrictions if the polar angle inclination is 0 or 180 elevation is 90 or 90 then the azimuth angle is arbitrary and if r is zero both azimuth and polar angles are arbitrary To define the coordinates as unique the user can assert the convention that in these cases the arbitrary coordinates are set to zero Plotting edit To plot any dot from its spherical coordinates r 8 f where 8 is inclination the user would move r units from the origin in the zenith reference direction z axis then rotate by the amount of the azimuth angle f about the origin from the designated azimuth reference direction i e either the x or y axis see Definition above and then rotate from the z axis by the amount of the 8 angle Applications edit nbsp In the mathematics convention A globe showing a unit sphere with tuple coordinates of point P red its radial distance r red not labeled its azimuthal angle 8 not labeled and its polar angle of inclination f not labeled The radial distance upward along the zenith axis from the point of origin to the surface of the sphere is assigned the value unity or 1 In this image r appears to equal 4 6 or 67 of unity i e four of the six nested shells to the surface The azimuth angle 8 appears to equal positive 90 as rotated counterclockwise from the azimuth reference x axis and the inclination f appears to equal 30 as rotated from the zenith axis Note the full rotation or inclination from the zenith axis to the y axis is 90 Just as the two dimensional Cartesian coordinate system is useful has a wide set of applications on a planar surface a two dimensional spherical coordinate system is useful on the surface of a sphere For example one sphere that is described in Cartesian coordinates with the equation x2 y2 z2 c2 can be described in spherical coordinates by the simple equation r c In this system shown here in the mathematics convention the sphere is adapted as a unit sphere where the radius is set to unity and then can generally be ignored see graphic This unit sphere simplification is also useful when dealing with objects such as rotational matrices Spherical coordinates are also useful in analyzing systems that have some degree of symmetry about a point including volume integrals inside a sphere the potential energy field surrounding a concentrated mass or charge or global weather simulation in a planet s atmosphere nbsp The output pattern of the industrial loudspeaker shown here uses spherical polar plots taken at six frequencies Three dimensional modeling of loudspeaker output patterns can be used to predict their performance A number of polar plots are required taken at a wide selection of frequencies as the pattern changes greatly with frequency Polar plots help to show that many loudspeakers tend toward omnidirectionality at lower frequencies An important application of spherical coordinates provides for the separation of variables in two partial differential equations the Laplace and the Helmholtz equations that arise in many physical problems The angular portions of the solutions to such equations take the form of spherical harmonics Another application is ergonomic design where r is the arm length of a stationary person and the angles describe the direction of the arm as it reaches out The spherical coordinate system is also commonly used in 3D game development to rotate the camera around the player s position 4 In geography edit Main article Geographic coordinate system See also ECEF Instead of inclination the geographic coordinate system uses elevation angle or latitude in the range aka domain 90 f 90 and rotated north from the equator plane Latitude i e the angle of latitude may be either geocentric latitude measured rotated from the Earth s center and designated variously by ps q f fc fg or geodetic latitude measured rotated from the observer s local vertical and typically designated f The polar angle inclination which is 90 minus the latitude and ranges from 0 to 180 is called colatitude in geography The azimuth angle or longitude of a given position on Earth commonly denoted by l is measured in degrees east or west from some conventional reference meridian most commonly the IERS Reference Meridian thus its domain or range is 180 l 180 and a given reading is typically designated East or West For positions on the Earth or other solid celestial body the reference plane is usually taken to be the plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation Instead of the radial distance r geographers commonly use altitude above or below some local reference surface vertical datum which for example may be the mean sea level When needed the radial distance can be computed from the altitude by adding the radius of Earth which is approximately 6 360 11 km 3 952 7 miles However modern geographical coordinate systems are quite complex and the positions implied by these simple formulae may be inaccurate by several kilometers The precise standard meanings of latitude longitude and altitude are currently defined by the World Geodetic System WGS and take into account the flattening of the Earth at the poles about 21 km or 13 miles and many other details Planetary coordinate systems use formulations analogous to the geographic coordinate system In astronomy edit A series of astronomical coordinate systems are used to measure the elevation angle from several fundamental planes These reference planes include the observer s horizon the galactic equator defined by the rotation of the Milky Way the celestial equator defined by Earth s rotation the plane of the ecliptic defined by Earth s orbit around the Sun and the plane of the earth terminator normal to the instantaneous direction to the Sun Coordinate system conversions editSee also List of common coordinate transformations To spherical coordinates As the spherical coordinate system is only one of many three dimensional coordinate systems there exist equations for converting coordinates between the spherical coordinate system and others Cartesian coordinates edit The spherical coordinates of a point in the ISO convention i e for physics radius r inclination 8 azimuth f can be obtained from its Cartesian coordinates x y z by the formulaer x 2 y 2 z 2 8 arccos z x 2 y 2 z 2 arccos z r arctan x 2 y 2 z if z gt 0 p arctan x 2 y 2 z if z lt 0 p 2 if z 0 and x y 0 undefined if x y z 0 f sgn y arccos x x 2 y 2 arctan y x if x gt 0 arctan y x p if x lt 0 and y 0 arctan y x p if x lt 0 and y lt 0 p 2 if x 0 and y gt 0 p 2 if x 0 and y lt 0 undefined if x 0 and y 0 displaystyle begin aligned r amp sqrt x 2 y 2 z 2 theta amp arccos frac z sqrt x 2 y 2 z 2 arccos frac z r begin cases arctan frac sqrt x 2 y 2 z amp text if z gt 0 pi arctan frac sqrt x 2 y 2 z amp text if z lt 0 frac pi 2 amp text if z 0 text and xy neq 0 text undefined amp text if x y z 0 end cases varphi amp operatorname sgn y arccos frac x sqrt x 2 y 2 begin cases arctan frac y x amp text if x gt 0 arctan frac y x pi amp text if x lt 0 text and y geq 0 arctan frac y x pi amp text if x lt 0 text and y lt 0 frac pi 2 amp text if x 0 text and y gt 0 frac pi 2 amp text if x 0 text and y lt 0 text undefined amp text if x 0 text and y 0 end cases end aligned nbsp The inverse tangent denoted in f arctan y x must be suitably defined taking into account the correct quadrant of x y See the article on atan2 Alternatively the conversion can be considered as two sequential rectangular to polar conversions the first in the Cartesian xy plane from x y to R f where R is the projection of r onto the xy plane and the second in the Cartesian zR plane from z R to r 8 The correct quadrants for f and 8 are implied by the correctness of the planar rectangular to polar conversions These formulae assume that the two systems have the same origin that the spherical reference plane is the Cartesian xy plane that 8 is inclination from the z direction and that the azimuth angles are measured from the Cartesian x axis so that the y axis has f 90 If 8 measures elevation from the reference plane instead of inclination from the zenith the arccos above becomes an arcsin and the cos 8 and sin 8 below become switched Conversely the Cartesian coordinates may be retrieved from the spherical coordinates radius r inclination 8 azimuth f where r 0 8 0 p f 0 2p byx r sin 8 cos f y r sin 8 sin f z r cos 8 displaystyle begin aligned x amp r sin theta cos varphi y amp r sin theta sin varphi z amp r cos theta end aligned nbsp Cylindrical coordinates edit Main article Cylindrical coordinate system Cylindrical coordinates axial radius r azimuth f elevation z may be converted into spherical coordinates central radius r inclination 8 azimuth f by the formulasr r 2 z 2 8 arctan r z arccos z r 2 z 2 f f displaystyle begin aligned r amp sqrt rho 2 z 2 theta amp arctan frac rho z arccos frac z sqrt rho 2 z 2 varphi amp varphi end aligned nbsp Conversely the spherical coordinates may be converted into cylindrical coordinates by the formulaer r sin 8 f f z r cos 8 displaystyle begin aligned rho amp r sin theta varphi amp varphi z amp r cos theta end aligned nbsp These formulae assume that the two systems have the same origin and same reference plane measure the azimuth angle f in the same senses from the same axis and that the spherical angle 8 is inclination from the cylindrical z axis Generalization editSee also Ellipsoidal coordinates It is also possible to deal with ellipsoids in Cartesian coordinates by using a modified version of the spherical coordinates Let P be an ellipsoid specified by the level seta x 2 b y 2 c z 2 d displaystyle ax 2 by 2 cz 2 d nbsp The modified spherical coordinates of a point in P in the ISO convention i e for physics radius r inclination 8 azimuth f can be obtained from its Cartesian coordinates x y z by the formulaex 1 a r sin 8 cos f y 1 b r sin 8 sin f z 1 c r cos 8 r 2 a x 2 b y 2 c z 2 displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac 1 sqrt a r sin theta cos varphi y amp frac 1 sqrt b r sin theta sin varphi z amp frac 1 sqrt c r cos theta r 2 amp ax 2 by 2 cz 2 end aligned nbsp An infinitesimal volume element is given byd V x y z r 8 f d r d 8 d f 1 a b c r 2 sin 8 d r d 8 d f 1 a b c r 2 d r d W displaystyle mathrm d V left frac partial x y z partial r theta varphi right dr d theta d varphi frac 1 sqrt abc r 2 sin theta mathrm d r mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi frac 1 sqrt abc r 2 mathrm d r mathrm d Omega nbsp The square root factor comes from the property of the determinant that allows a constant to be pulled out from a column k a b c k d e f k g h i k a b c d e f g h i displaystyle begin vmatrix ka amp b amp c kd amp e amp f kg amp h amp i end vmatrix k begin vmatrix a amp b amp c d amp e amp f g amp h amp i end vmatrix nbsp Integration and differentiation in spherical coordinates edit nbsp Unit vectors in spherical coordinates The following equations Iyanaga 1977 assume that the colatitude 8 is the inclination from the positive z axis as in the physics convention discussed The line element for an infinitesimal displacement from r 8 f to r dr 8 d8 f df isd r d r r r d 8 8 r sin 8 d f f displaystyle mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d r hat mathbf r r mathrm d theta hat boldsymbol theta r sin theta mathrm d varphi mathbf hat boldsymbol varphi nbsp where r sin 8 cos f x sin 8 sin f y cos 8 z 8 cos 8 cos f x cos 8 sin f y sin 8 z f sin f x cos f y displaystyle begin aligned hat mathbf r amp sin theta cos varphi hat mathbf x sin theta sin varphi hat mathbf y cos theta hat mathbf z hat boldsymbol theta amp cos theta cos varphi hat mathbf x cos theta sin varphi hat mathbf y sin theta hat mathbf z hat boldsymbol varphi amp sin varphi hat mathbf x cos varphi hat mathbf y end aligned nbsp are the local orthogonal unit vectors in the directions of increasing r 8 and f respectively and x ŷ and ẑ are the unit vectors in Cartesian coordinates The linear transformation to this right handed coordinate triplet is a rotation matrix R sin 8 cos f sin 8 sin f cos 8 cos 8 cos f cos 8 sin f sin 8 sin f cos f 0 displaystyle R begin pmatrix sin theta cos varphi amp sin theta sin varphi amp hphantom cos theta cos theta cos varphi amp cos theta sin varphi amp sin theta sin varphi amp cos varphi amp hphantom 0 end pmatrix nbsp This gives the transformation from the spherical to the cartesian the other way around is given by its inverse Note the matrix is an orthogonal matrix that is its inverse is simply its transpose The Cartesian unit vectors are thus related to the spherical unit vectors by x y z sin 8 cos f cos 8 cos f sin f sin 8 sin f cos 8 sin f cos f cos 8 sin 8 0 r 8 f displaystyle begin bmatrix mathbf hat x mathbf hat y mathbf hat z end bmatrix begin bmatrix sin theta cos varphi amp cos theta cos varphi amp sin varphi sin theta sin varphi amp cos theta sin varphi amp hphantom cos varphi cos theta amp sin theta amp hphantom 0 end bmatrix begin bmatrix boldsymbol hat r boldsymbol hat theta boldsymbol hat varphi end bmatrix nbsp The general form of the formula to prove the differential line element is 5 d r i r x i d x i i r x i r x i r x i d x i i r x i d x i x i displaystyle mathrm d mathbf r sum i frac partial mathbf r partial x i mathrm d x i sum i left frac partial mathbf r partial x i right frac frac partial mathbf r partial x i left frac partial mathbf r partial x i right mathrm d x i sum i left frac partial mathbf r partial x i right mathrm d x i hat boldsymbol x i nbsp that is the change in r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp is decomposed into individual changes corresponding to changes in the individual coordinates To apply this to the present case one needs to calculate how r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp changes with each of the coordinates In the conventions used r r sin 8 cos f r sin 8 sin f r cos 8 displaystyle mathbf r begin bmatrix r sin theta cos varphi r sin theta sin varphi r cos theta end bmatrix nbsp Thus r r sin 8 cos f sin 8 sin f cos 8 r r 8 r cos 8 cos f r cos 8 sin f r sin 8 r 8 r f r sin 8 sin f r sin 8 cos f 0 r sin 8 f displaystyle frac partial mathbf r partial r begin bmatrix sin theta cos varphi sin theta sin varphi cos theta end bmatrix mathbf hat r quad frac partial mathbf r partial theta begin bmatrix r cos theta cos varphi r cos theta sin varphi r sin theta end bmatrix r hat boldsymbol theta quad frac partial mathbf r partial varphi begin bmatrix r sin theta sin varphi hphantom r sin theta cos varphi 0 end bmatrix r sin theta mathbf hat boldsymbol varphi nbsp The desired coefficients are the magnitudes of these vectors 5 r r 1 r 8 r r f r sin 8 displaystyle left frac partial mathbf r partial r right 1 quad left frac partial mathbf r partial theta right r quad left frac partial mathbf r partial varphi right r sin theta nbsp The surface element spanning from 8 to 8 d8 and f to f df on a spherical surface at constant radius r is thend S r r 8 r f d 8 d f r 8 r sin 8 f d 8 d f r 2 sin 8 d 8 d f displaystyle mathrm d S r left frac partial mathbf r partial theta times frac partial mathbf r partial varphi right mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi left r hat boldsymbol theta times r sin theta boldsymbol hat varphi right mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi r 2 sin theta mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi nbsp Thus the differential solid angle isd W d S r r 2 sin 8 d 8 d f displaystyle mathrm d Omega frac mathrm d S r r 2 sin theta mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi nbsp The surface element in a surface of polar angle 8 constant a cone with vertex at the origin isd S 8 r sin 8 d f d r displaystyle mathrm d S theta r sin theta mathrm d varphi mathrm d r nbsp The surface element in a surface of azimuth f constant a vertical half plane isd S f r d r d 8 displaystyle mathrm d S varphi r mathrm d r mathrm d theta nbsp The volume element spanning from r to r dr 8 to 8 d8 and f to f df is specified by the determinant of the Jacobian matrix of partial derivatives J x y z r 8 f sin 8 cos f r cos 8 cos f r sin 8 sin f sin 8 sin f r cos 8 sin f r sin 8 cos f cos 8 r sin 8 0 displaystyle J frac partial x y z partial r theta varphi begin pmatrix sin theta cos varphi amp r cos theta cos varphi amp r sin theta sin varphi sin theta sin varphi amp r cos theta sin varphi amp hphantom r sin theta cos varphi cos theta amp r sin theta amp hphantom 0 end pmatrix nbsp namely d V x y z r 8 f d r d 8 d f r 2 sin 8 d r d 8 d f r 2 d r d W displaystyle mathrm d V left frac partial x y z partial r theta varphi right mathrm d r mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi r 2 sin theta mathrm d r mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi r 2 mathrm d r mathrm d Omega nbsp Thus for example a function f r 8 f can be integrated over every point in R3 by the triple integral 0 2 p 0 p 0 f r 8 f r 2 sin 8 d r d 8 d f displaystyle int limits 0 2 pi int limits 0 pi int limits 0 infty f r theta varphi r 2 sin theta mathrm d r mathrm d theta mathrm d varphi nbsp The del operator in this system leads to the following expressions for the gradient and Laplacian for scalar fields f f r r 1 r f 8 8 1 r sin 8 f f f 2 f 1 r 2 r r 2 f r 1 r 2 sin 8 8 sin 8 f 8 1 r 2 sin 2 8 2 f f 2 2 r 2 2 r r f 1 r 2 sin 8 8 sin 8 8 f 1 r 2 sin 2 8 2 f 2 f displaystyle begin aligned nabla f amp partial f over partial r hat mathbf r 1 over r partial f over partial theta hat boldsymbol theta 1 over r sin theta partial f over partial varphi hat boldsymbol varphi 8pt nabla 2 f amp 1 over r 2 partial over partial r left r 2 partial f over partial r right 1 over r 2 sin theta partial over partial theta left sin theta partial f over partial theta right 1 over r 2 sin 2 theta partial 2 f over partial varphi 2 8pt amp left frac partial 2 partial r 2 frac 2 r frac partial partial r right f 1 over r 2 sin theta partial over partial theta left sin theta frac partial partial theta right f frac 1 r 2 sin 2 theta frac partial 2 partial varphi 2 f 8pt end aligned nbsp And it leads to the following expressions for the divergence and curl of vector fields A 1 r 2 r r 2 A r 1 r sin 8 8 sin 8 A 8 1 r sin 8 A f f displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf A frac 1 r 2 partial over partial r left r 2 A r right frac 1 r sin theta partial over partial theta left sin theta A theta right frac 1 r sin theta partial A varphi over partial varphi nbsp A 1 r sin 8 8 A f sin 8 A 8 f r 1 r 1 sin 8 A r f r r A f 8 1 r r r A 8 A r 8 f displaystyle begin aligned nabla times mathbf A amp frac 1 r sin theta left partial over partial theta left A varphi sin theta right partial A theta over partial varphi right hat mathbf r 4pt amp frac 1 r left 1 over sin theta partial A r over partial varphi partial over partial r left rA varphi right right hat boldsymbol theta 4pt amp frac 1 r left partial over partial r left rA theta right partial A r over partial theta right hat boldsymbol varphi end aligned nbsp Further the inverse Jacobian in Cartesian coordinates isJ 1 x r y r z r x z r 2 x 2 y 2 y z r 2 x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 r 2 x 2 y 2 y x 2 y 2 x x 2 y 2 0 displaystyle J 1 begin pmatrix dfrac x r amp dfrac y r amp dfrac z r dfrac xz r 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 amp dfrac yz r 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 amp dfrac left x 2 y 2 right r 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 dfrac y x 2 y 2 amp dfrac x x 2 y 2 amp 0 end pmatrix nbsp The metric tensor in the spherical coordinate system is g J T J displaystyle g J T J nbsp Distance in spherical coordinates editIn spherical coordinates given two points with f being the azimuthal coordinater r 8 f r r 8 f displaystyle begin aligned mathbf r amp r theta varphi mathbf r amp r theta varphi end aligned nbsp The distance between the two points can be expressed as 6 D r 2 r 2 2 r r sin 8 sin 8 cos f f cos 8 cos 8 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf D amp sqrt r 2 r 2 2rr sin theta sin theta cos varphi varphi cos theta cos theta end aligned nbsp Kinematics editIn spherical coordinates the position of a point or particle although better written as a triple r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp can be written as 7 r r r displaystyle mathbf r r mathbf hat r nbsp Its velocity is then 7 v d r d t r r r 8 8 r f sin 8 f displaystyle mathbf v frac mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d t dot r mathbf hat r r dot theta hat boldsymbol theta r dot varphi sin theta mathbf hat boldsymbol varphi nbsp and its acceleration is 7 a d v d t r r 8 2 r f 2 sin 2 8 r r 8 2 r 8 r f 2 sin 8 cos 8 8 r f sin 8 2 r f sin 8 2 r 8 f cos 8 f displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a amp frac mathrm d mathbf v mathrm d t 1ex amp hphantom left ddot r r dot theta 2 r dot varphi 2 sin 2 theta right mathbf hat r amp left r ddot theta 2 dot r dot theta r dot varphi 2 sin theta cos theta right hat boldsymbol theta amp left r ddot varphi sin theta 2 dot r dot varphi sin theta 2r dot theta dot varphi cos theta right hat boldsymbol varphi end aligned nbsp The angular momentum isL r p r m v m r 2 f sin 8 8 8 f displaystyle mathbf L mathbf r times mathbf p mathbf r times m mathbf v mr 2 left dot varphi sin theta mathbf hat boldsymbol theta dot theta hat boldsymbol varphi right nbsp Where m displaystyle m nbsp is mass In the case of a constant f or else 8 p 2 this reduces to vector calculus in polar coordinates The corresponding angular momentum operator then follows from the phase space reformulation of the above L i ℏ r i ℏ 8 sin 8 ϕ ϕ 8 displaystyle mathbf L i hbar mathbf r times nabla i hbar left frac hat boldsymbol theta sin theta frac partial partial phi hat boldsymbol phi frac partial partial theta right nbsp The torque is given as 7 t d L d t r F m 2 r r f sin 8 r 2 f sin 8 2 r 2 8 f cos 8 8 m r 2 8 2 r r 8 r 2 f 2 sin 8 cos 8 f displaystyle mathbf tau frac mathrm d mathbf L mathrm d t mathbf r times mathbf F m left 2r dot r dot varphi sin theta r 2 ddot varphi sin theta 2r 2 dot theta dot varphi cos theta right hat boldsymbol theta m left r 2 ddot theta 2r dot r dot theta r 2 dot varphi 2 sin theta cos theta right hat boldsymbol varphi nbsp The kinetic energy is given as 7 E k 1 2 m r 2 r 8 2 r f sin 8 2 displaystyle E k frac 1 2 m left left dot r right 2 left r dot theta right 2 left r dot varphi sin theta right 2 right nbsp See also editCelestial coordinate system System for specifying positions of celestial objectsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Coordinate system Method for specifying point positions Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates Mathematical gradient operator in certain coordinate systems Double Fourier sphere method Elevation ballistics Angle in ballistics Euler angles Description of the orientation of a rigid body Gimbal lock Loss of one degree of freedom in a three dimensional three gimbal mechanism Hypersphere Generalized sphere of dimension n mathematics Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Jacobian matrix and determinant Matrix of all first order partial derivatives of a vector valued function List of canonical coordinate transformations Sphere Set of points equidistant from a center Spherical harmonic Special mathematical functions defined on the surface of a spherePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Theodolite Optical surveying instrument Vector fields in cylindrical and spherical coordinates Vector field representation in 3D curvilinear coordinate systems Yaw pitch and roll Principal directions in aviationPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsNotes edit ISO 80000 2 2019 Quantities and units Part 2 Mathematics ISO 19 May 2020 pp 20 21 Item no 2 17 3 Retrieved 2020 08 12 Duffett Smith P and Zwart J p 34 a b Eric W Weisstein 2005 10 26 Spherical Coordinates MathWorld Retrieved 2010 01 15 Video Game Math Polar and Spherical Notation Academy of Interactive Entertainment AIE Retrieved 2022 02 16 a b Line element dl in spherical coordinates derivation diagram Stack Exchange October 21 2011 https math stackexchange com questions 833002 distance between two points in spherical coordinates a b c d e Reed Bruce Cameron 2019 Keplerian ellipses the physics of the gravitational two body problem Morgan amp Claypool Publishers Institute of Physics San Rafael California 40 Oak Drive San Rafael CA 94903 US ISBN 978 1 64327 470 6 OCLC 1104053368 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bibliography editIyanaga Shōkichi Kawada Yukiyosi 1977 Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mathematics MIT Press ISBN 978 0262090162 Morse PM Feshbach H 1953 Methods of Theoretical Physics Part I New York McGraw Hill p 658 ISBN 0 07 043316 X LCCN 52011515 Margenau H Murphy GM 1956 The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry New York D van Nostrand pp 177 178 LCCN 55010911 Korn GA Korn TM 1961 Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers New York McGraw Hill pp 174 175 LCCN 59014456 ASIN B0000CKZX7 Sauer R Szabo I 1967 Mathematische Hilfsmittel des Ingenieurs New York Springer Verlag pp 95 96 LCCN 67025285 Moon P Spencer DE 1988 Spherical Coordinates r 8 ps Field Theory Handbook Including Coordinate Systems Differential Equations and Their Solutions corrected 2nd ed 3rd print ed New York Springer Verlag pp 24 27 Table 1 05 ISBN 978 0 387 18430 2 Duffett Smith P Zwart J 2011 Practical Astronomy with your Calculator or Spreadsheet 4th Edition New York Cambridge University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0521146548 External links edit Spherical coordinates Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 MathWorld description of spherical coordinates Coordinate Converter converts between polar Cartesian and spherical coordinates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spherical coordinate system amp oldid 1222545631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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