fbpx
Wikipedia

Spherical trigonometry

Spherical trigonometry is the branch of spherical geometry that deals with the metrical relationships between the sides and angles of spherical triangles, traditionally expressed using trigonometric functions. On the sphere, geodesics are great circles. Spherical trigonometry is of great importance for calculations in astronomy, geodesy, and navigation.

The octant of a sphere is a spherical triangle with three right angles.

The origins of spherical trigonometry in Greek mathematics and the major developments in Islamic mathematics are discussed fully in History of trigonometry and Mathematics in medieval Islam. The subject came to fruition in Early Modern times with important developments by John Napier, Delambre and others, and attained an essentially complete form by the end of the nineteenth century with the publication of Todhunter's textbook Spherical trigonometry for the use of colleges and Schools.[1] Since then, significant developments have been the application of vector methods, quaternion methods, and the use of numerical methods.

Preliminaries Edit

 
Eight spherical triangles defined by the intersection of three great circles.

Spherical polygons Edit

A spherical polygon is a polygon on the surface of the sphere. Its sides are arcs of great circles—the spherical geometry equivalent of line segments in plane geometry.

Such polygons may have any number of sides greater than 1. Two-sided spherical polygons—lunes, also called digons or bi-angles—are bounded by two great-circle arcs: a familiar example is the curved outward-facing surface of a segment of an orange. Three arcs serve to define a spherical triangle, the principal subject of this article. Polygons with higher numbers of sides (4-sided spherical quadrilaterals, 5-sided spherical pentagons, etc.) are defined in similar manner. Analogously to their plane counterparts, spherical polygons with more than 3 sides can always be treated as the composition of spherical triangles.

One spherical polygon with interesting properties is the pentagramma mirificum, a 5-sided spherical star polygon with a right angle at every vertex.

From this point in the article, discussion will be restricted to spherical triangles, referred to simply as triangles.

Notation Edit

 
The basic triangle on a unit sphere.
  • Both vertices and angles at the vertices of a triangle are denoted by the same upper case letters: A, B, and C.
  • Sides are denoted by lower-case letters: a, b, and c.
  • The angle A (respectively, B, C) may be regarded either as the angle between the two planes that intersect the sphere at the vertex A, or, equivalently, as the angle between the tangents of the great circle arcs where they meet at the vertex.
  • Angles are expressed in radians. The angles of proper spherical triangles are (by convention) less than π, so that π < A + B + C < 3π (Todhunter,[1] Art.22,32). In particular, the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is strictly greater than the sum of the angles of a triangle defined on the Euclidean plane, which is always exactly π radians.
  • Sides are also expressed in radians. A side (regarded as a great circle arc) is measured by the angle that it subtends at the centre. On the unit sphere, this radian measure is numerically equal to the arc length. By convention, the sides of proper spherical triangles are less than π, so that 0 < a + b + c < 2π (Todhunter,[1] Art.22,32).
  • The sphere's radius is taken as unity. For specific practical problems on a sphere of radius R the measured lengths of the sides must be divided by R before using the identities given below. Likewise, after a calculation on the unit sphere the sides a, b, c must be multiplied by R.

Polar triangles Edit

 
The polar triangle A'B'C'

The polar triangle associated with a triangle ABC is defined as follows. Consider the great circle that contains the side BC. This great circle is defined by the intersection of a diametral plane with the surface. Draw the normal to that plane at the centre: it intersects the surface at two points and the point that is on the same side of the plane as A is (conventionally) termed the pole of A and it is denoted by A′. The points B′ and C′ are defined similarly.

The triangle A′B′C′ is the polar triangle corresponding to triangle ABC. A very important theorem (Todhunter,[1] Art.27) proves that the angles and sides of the polar triangle are given by

 

Therefore, if any identity is proved for the triangle ABC then we can immediately derive a second identity by applying the first identity to the polar triangle by making the above substitutions. This is how the supplemental cosine equations are derived from the cosine equations. Similarly, the identities for a quadrantal triangle can be derived from those for a right-angled triangle. The polar triangle of a polar triangle is the original triangle.

Cosine rules and sine rules Edit

Cosine rules Edit

The cosine rule is the fundamental identity of spherical trigonometry: all other identities, including the sine rule, may be derived from the cosine rule:

 
 
 

These identities generalize the cosine rule of plane trigonometry, to which they are asymptotically equivalent in the limit of small interior angles. (On the unit sphere, if   set   and   etc.; see Spherical law of cosines.)

Sine rules Edit

The spherical law of sines is given by the formula

 

These identities approximate the sine rule of plane trigonometry when the sides are much smaller than the radius of the sphere.

Derivation of the cosine rule Edit

 

The spherical cosine formulae were originally proved by elementary geometry and the planar cosine rule (Todhunter,[1] Art.37). He also gives a derivation using simple coordinate geometry and the planar cosine rule (Art.60). The approach outlined here uses simpler vector methods. (These methods are also discussed at Spherical law of cosines.)

Consider three unit vectors OA, OB and OC drawn from the origin to the vertices of the triangle (on the unit sphere). The arc BC subtends an angle of magnitude a at the centre and therefore OB·OC = cos a. Introduce a Cartesian basis with OA along the z-axis and OB in the xz-plane making an angle c with the z-axis. The vector OC projects to ON in the xy-plane and the angle between ON and the x-axis is A. Therefore, the three vectors have components:

OA      OB      OC  .

The scalar product OB·OC in terms of the components is

OB·OC .

Equating the two expressions for the scalar product gives

 

This equation can be re-arranged to give explicit expressions for the angle in terms of the sides:

 

The other cosine rules are obtained by cyclic permutations.

Derivation of the sine rule Edit

This derivation is given in Todhunter,[1] (Art.40). From the identity   and the explicit expression for   given immediately above

 

Since the right hand side is invariant under a cyclic permutation of   the spherical sine rule follows immediately.

Alternative derivations Edit

There are many ways of deriving the fundamental cosine and sine rules and the other rules developed in the following sections. For example, Todhunter[1] gives two proofs of the cosine rule (Articles 37 and 60) and two proofs of the sine rule (Articles 40 and 42). The page on Spherical law of cosines gives four different proofs of the cosine rule. Text books on geodesy[2] and spherical astronomy[3] give different proofs and the online resources of MathWorld provide yet more.[4] There are even more exotic derivations, such as that of Banerjee[5] who derives the formulae using the linear algebra of projection matrices and also quotes methods in differential geometry and the group theory of rotations.

The derivation of the cosine rule presented above has the merits of simplicity and directness and the derivation of the sine rule emphasises the fact that no separate proof is required other than the cosine rule. However, the above geometry may be used to give an independent proof of the sine rule. The scalar triple product, OA·(OB × OC) evaluates to   in the basis shown. Similarly, in a basis oriented with the z-axis along OB, the triple product OB·(OC × OA) evaluates to  . Therefore, the invariance of the triple product under cyclic permutations gives   which is the first of the sine rules. See curved variations of the law of sines to see details of this derivation.

Identities Edit

Supplemental cosine rules Edit

Applying the cosine rules to the polar triangle gives (Todhunter,[1] Art.47), i.e. replacing A by π – aa by π – A etc.,

 

Cotangent four-part formulae Edit

The six parts of a triangle may be written in cyclic order as (aCbAcB). The cotangent, or four-part, formulae relate two sides and two angles forming four consecutive parts around the triangle, for example (aCbA) or (BaCb). In such a set there are inner and outer parts: for example in the set (BaCb) the inner angle is C, the inner side is a, the outer angle is B, the outer side is b. The cotangent rule may be written as (Todhunter,[1] Art.44)

 

and the six possible equations are (with the relevant set shown at right):

 

To prove the first formula start from the first cosine rule and on the right-hand side substitute for   from the third cosine rule:

 

The result follows on dividing by  . Similar techniques with the other two cosine rules give CT3 and CT5. The other three equations follow by applying rules 1, 3 and 5 to the polar triangle.

Half-angle and half-side formulae Edit

With   and  

 

Another twelve identities follow by cyclic permutation.

The proof (Todhunter,[1] Art.49) of the first formula starts from the identity 2sin2(A/2) = 1 – cosA, using the cosine rule to express A in terms of the sides and replacing the sum of two cosines by a product. (See sum-to-product identities.) The second formula starts from the identity 2cos2(A/2) = 1 + cosA, the third is a quotient and the remainder follow by applying the results to the polar triangle.

Delambre analogies Edit

The Delambre analogies (also called Gauss analogies) were published independently by Delambre, Gauss, and Mollweide in 1807–1809.[6]

 
Another eight identities follow by cyclic permutation.

Proved by expanding the numerators and using the half angle formulae. (Todhunter,[1] Art.54 and Delambre[7])

Napier's analogies Edit

 

Another eight identities follow by cyclic permutation.

These identities follow by division of the Delambre formulae. (Todhunter,[1] Art.52)

Taking quotients of these yields the law of tangents, first stated by Persian mathematician Nasir al-Din al-Tusi (1201–1274),

 

Napier's rules for right spherical triangles Edit

 

When one of the angles, say C, of a spherical triangle is equal to π/2 the various identities given above are considerably simplified. There are ten identities relating three elements chosen from the set a, b, c, A, B.

Napier[8] provided an elegant mnemonic aid for the ten independent equations: the mnemonic is called Napier's circle or Napier's pentagon (when the circle in the above figure, right, is replaced by a pentagon).

First, write the six parts of the triangle (three vertex angles, three arc angles for the sides) in the order they occur around any circuit of the triangle: for the triangle shown above left, going clockwise starting with a gives aCbAcB. Next replace the parts that are not adjacent to C (that is A, c, B) by their complements and then delete the angle C from the list. The remaining parts can then be drawn as five ordered, equal slices of a pentagram, or circle, as shown in the above figure (right). For any choice of three contiguous parts, one (the middle part) will be adjacent to two parts and opposite the other two parts. The ten Napier's Rules are given by

  • sine of the middle part = the product of the tangents of the adjacent parts
  • sine of the middle part = the product of the cosines of the opposite parts

The key for remembering which trigonometric function goes with which part is to look at the first vowel of the kind of part: middle parts take the sine, adjacent parts take the tangent, and opposite parts take the cosine. For an example, starting with the sector containing   we have:

 

The full set of rules for the right spherical triangle is (Todhunter,[1] Art.62)

 

Napier's rules for quadrantal triangles Edit

 
A quadrantal spherical triangle together with Napier's circle for use in his mnemonics

A quadrantal spherical triangle is defined to be a spherical triangle in which one of the sides subtends an angle of π/2 radians at the centre of the sphere: on the unit sphere the side has length π/2. In the case that the side c has length π/2 on the unit sphere the equations governing the remaining sides and angles may be obtained by applying the rules for the right spherical triangle of the previous section to the polar triangle A'B'C' with sides a',b',c' such that A' = π − aa' π − A etc. The results are:

 

Five-part rules Edit

Substituting the second cosine rule into the first and simplifying gives:

 
 

Cancelling the factor of   gives

 

Similar substitutions in the other cosine and supplementary cosine formulae give a large variety of 5-part rules. They are rarely used.

Cagnoli's Equation Edit

Multiplying the first cosine rule by   gives

 

Similarly multiplying the first supplementary cosine rule by   yields

 

Subtracting the two and noting that it follows from the sine rules that   produces Cagnoli's equation

 

which is a relation between the six parts of the spherical triangle.[9]

Solution of triangles Edit

Oblique triangles Edit

The solution of triangles is the principal purpose of spherical trigonometry: given three, four or five elements of the triangle, determine the others. The case of five given elements is trivial, requiring only a single application of the sine rule. For four given elements there is one non-trivial case, which is discussed below. For three given elements there are six cases: three sides, two sides and an included or opposite angle, two angles and an included or opposite side, or three angles. (The last case has no analogue in planar trigonometry.) No single method solves all cases. The figure below shows the seven non-trivial cases: in each case the given sides are marked with a cross-bar and the given angles with an arc. (The given elements are also listed below the triangle). In the summary notation here such as ASA, A refers to a given angle and S refers to a given side, and the sequence of A's and S's in the notation refers to the corresponding sequence in the triangle.

 
  • Case 1: three sides given (SSS). The cosine rule may be used to give the angles A, B, and C but, to avoid ambiguities, the half angle formulae are preferred.
  • Case 2: two sides and an included angle given (SAS). The cosine rule gives a and then we are back to Case 1.
  • Case 3: two sides and an opposite angle given (SSA). The sine rule gives C and then we have Case 7. There are either one or two solutions.
  • Case 4: two angles and an included side given (ASA). The four-part cotangent formulae for sets (cBaC) and (BaCb) give c and b, then A follows from the sine rule.
  • Case 5: two angles and an opposite side given (AAS). The sine rule gives b and then we have Case 7 (rotated). There are either one or two solutions.
  • Case 6: three angles given (AAA). The supplemental cosine rule may be used to give the sides a, b, and c but, to avoid ambiguities, the half-side formulae are preferred.
  • Case 7: two angles and two opposite sides given (SSAA). Use Napier's analogies for a and A; or, use Case 3 (SSA) or case 5 (AAS).

The solution methods listed here are not the only possible choices: many others are possible. In general it is better to choose methods that avoid taking an inverse sine because of the possible ambiguity between an angle and its supplement. The use of half-angle formulae is often advisable because half-angles will be less than π/2 and therefore free from ambiguity. There is a full discussion in Todhunter. The article Solution of triangles#Solving spherical triangles presents variants on these methods with a slightly different notation.

There is a full discussion of the solution of oblique triangles in Todhunter.[1]: Chap. VI  See also the discussion in Ross.[10]

 

Solution by right-angled triangles Edit

Another approach is to split the triangle into two right-angled triangles. For example, take the Case 3 example where b, c, B are given. Construct the great circle from A that is normal to the side BC at the point D. Use Napier's rules to solve the triangle ABD: use c and B to find the sides AD, BD and the angle BAD. Then use Napier's rules to solve the triangle ACD: that is use AD and b to find the side DC and the angles C and DAC. The angle A and side a follow by addition.

Numerical considerations Edit

Not all of the rules obtained are numerically robust in extreme examples, for example when an angle approaches zero or π. Problems and solutions may have to be examined carefully, particularly when writing code to solve an arbitrary triangle.

Area and spherical excess Edit

 
Lexell's theorem: the triangles of constant area on a fixed base AB have their free vertex C along a small circle through the points antipodal to A and B.

Consider an N-sided spherical polygon and let An denote the n-th interior angle. The area of such a polygon is given by (Todhunter,[1] Art.99)

 

For the case of triangle this reduces to Girard's theorem

 

where E is the amount by which the sum of the angles exceeds π radians. The quantity E is called the spherical excess of the triangle. This theorem is named after its author, Albert Girard.[11] An earlier proof was derived, but not published, by the English mathematician Thomas Harriot. On a sphere of radius R both of the above area expressions are multiplied by R2. The definition of the excess is independent of the radius of the sphere.

The converse result may be written as

 

Since the area of a triangle cannot be negative the spherical excess is always positive. It is not necessarily small, because the sum of the angles may attain 5π (3π for proper angles). For example, an octant of a sphere is a spherical triangle with three right angles, so that the excess is π/2. In practical applications it is often small: for example the triangles of geodetic survey typically have a spherical excess much less than 1' of arc. (Rapp[12] Clarke,[13] Legendre's theorem on spherical triangles). On the Earth the excess of an equilateral triangle with sides 21.3 km (and area 393 km2) is approximately 1 arc second.

There are many formulae for the excess. For example, Todhunter,[1] (Art.101—103) gives ten examples including that of L'Huilier:

 

where  .

Because some triangles are badly characterized by their edges (e.g., if  ), it is often better to use the formula for the excess in terms of two edges and their included angle

 

When triangle   is a right triangle with right angle at   then   and   so this reduces to

 

Angle deficit is defined similarly for hyperbolic geometry.

From latitude and longitude Edit

The spherical excess of a spherical quadrangle bounded by the equator, the two meridians of longitudes   and   and the great-circle arc between two points with longitude and latitude   and   is

 

This result is obtained from one of Napier's analogies. In the limit where   are all small, this reduces to the familiar trapezoidal area,  .

The area of a polygon can be calculated from individual quadrangles of the above type, from (analogously) individual triangle bounded by a segment of the polygon and two meridians,[14] by a line integral with Green's theorem,[15] or via an equal-area projection as commonly done in GIS. The other algorithms can still be used with the side lengths calculated using a great-circle distance formula.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Todhunter, I. (1886). Spherical Trigonometry (5th ed.). MacMillan. from the original on 2020-04-14. Retrieved 2013-07-28.
  2. ^ Clarke, Alexander Ross (1880). Geodesy. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 2484948 – via the Internet Archive.
  3. ^ Smart, W.M. (1977). Text-Book on Spherical Astronomy (6th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Chapter 1 – via the Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Spherical Trigonometry". MathWorld. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  5. ^ Banerjee, Sudipto (2004), "Revisiting Spherical Trigonometry with Orthogonal Projectors", The College Mathematics Journal, Mathematical Association of America, 35 (5): 375–381, doi:10.1080/07468342.2004.11922099, JSTOR 4146847, S2CID 122277398, from the original on 2020-07-22, retrieved 2016-01-10
  6. ^ Todhunter, Isaac (1873). "Note on the history of certain formulæ in spherical trigonometry". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 45 (298): 98–100. doi:10.1080/14786447308640820.
  7. ^ Delambre, J. B. J. (1807). Connaissance des Tems 1809. p. 445. from the original on 2020-07-22. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  8. ^ Napier, J (1614). Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Constructio. p. 50. from the original on 2013-04-30. Retrieved 2016-05-14. An 1889 translation The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms is available as en e-book from Abe Books 2020-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Chauvenet, William (1867). A Treatise on Plane and Spherical Trigonometry. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. p. 165. from the original on 2021-07-11. Retrieved 2021-07-11.
  10. ^ Ross, Debra Anne. Master Math: Trigonometry, Career Press, 2002.
  11. ^ Another proof of Girard's theorem may be found at [1] 2012-10-31 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Rapp, Richard H. (1991). Geometric Geodesy Part I (PDF). p. 89.[permanent dead link] (pdf page 99),
  13. ^ Clarke, Alexander Ross (1880). Geodesy. Clarendon Press. (Chapters 2 and 9). Recently republished at Forgotten Books 2020-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Chamberlain, Robert G.; Duquette, William H. (17 April 2007). Some algorithms for polygons on a sphere. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. NASA JPL. from the original on 22 July 2020. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  15. ^ "Surface area of polygon on sphere or ellipsoid – MATLAB areaint". www.mathworks.com. from the original on 2021-05-01. Retrieved 2021-05-01.

External links Edit

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Spherical Trigonometry". MathWorld. a more thorough list of identities, with some derivation
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Spherical Triangle". MathWorld. a more thorough list of identities, with some derivation
  • TriSph A free software to solve the spherical triangles, configurable to different practical applications and configured for gnomonic
  • "Revisiting Spherical Trigonometry with Orthogonal Projectors" by Sudipto Banerjee. The paper derives the spherical law of cosines and law of sines using elementary linear algebra and projection matrices.
  • "A Visual Proof of Girard's Theorem". Wolfram Demonstrations Project. by Okay Arik
  • "The Book of Instruction on Deviant Planes and Simple Planes", a manuscript in Arabic that dates back to 1740 and talks about spherical trigonometry, with diagrams
  • Some Algorithms for Polygons on a Sphere Robert G. Chamberlain, William H. Duquette, Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The paper develops and explains many useful formulae, perhaps with a focus on navigation and cartography.
  • Online computation of spherical triangles

spherical, trigonometry, branch, spherical, geometry, that, deals, with, metrical, relationships, between, sides, angles, spherical, triangles, traditionally, expressed, using, trigonometric, functions, sphere, geodesics, great, circles, great, importance, cal. Spherical trigonometry is the branch of spherical geometry that deals with the metrical relationships between the sides and angles of spherical triangles traditionally expressed using trigonometric functions On the sphere geodesics are great circles Spherical trigonometry is of great importance for calculations in astronomy geodesy and navigation The octant of a sphere is a spherical triangle with three right angles The origins of spherical trigonometry in Greek mathematics and the major developments in Islamic mathematics are discussed fully in History of trigonometry and Mathematics in medieval Islam The subject came to fruition in Early Modern times with important developments by John Napier Delambre and others and attained an essentially complete form by the end of the nineteenth century with the publication of Todhunter s textbook Spherical trigonometry for the use of colleges and Schools 1 Since then significant developments have been the application of vector methods quaternion methods and the use of numerical methods Contents 1 Preliminaries 1 1 Spherical polygons 1 2 Notation 1 3 Polar triangles 2 Cosine rules and sine rules 2 1 Cosine rules 2 2 Sine rules 2 3 Derivation of the cosine rule 2 4 Derivation of the sine rule 2 5 Alternative derivations 3 Identities 3 1 Supplemental cosine rules 3 2 Cotangent four part formulae 3 3 Half angle and half side formulae 3 4 Delambre analogies 3 5 Napier s analogies 3 6 Napier s rules for right spherical triangles 3 7 Napier s rules for quadrantal triangles 3 8 Five part rules 3 9 Cagnoli s Equation 4 Solution of triangles 4 1 Oblique triangles 4 2 Solution by right angled triangles 4 3 Numerical considerations 5 Area and spherical excess 5 1 From latitude and longitude 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPreliminaries Edit nbsp Eight spherical triangles defined by the intersection of three great circles Spherical polygons Edit A spherical polygon is a polygon on the surface of the sphere Its sides are arcs of great circles the spherical geometry equivalent of line segments in plane geometry Such polygons may have any number of sides greater than 1 Two sided spherical polygons lunes also called digons or bi angles are bounded by two great circle arcs a familiar example is the curved outward facing surface of a segment of an orange Three arcs serve to define a spherical triangle the principal subject of this article Polygons with higher numbers of sides 4 sided spherical quadrilaterals 5 sided spherical pentagons etc are defined in similar manner Analogously to their plane counterparts spherical polygons with more than 3 sides can always be treated as the composition of spherical triangles One spherical polygon with interesting properties is the pentagramma mirificum a 5 sided spherical star polygon with a right angle at every vertex From this point in the article discussion will be restricted to spherical triangles referred to simply as triangles Notation Edit nbsp The basic triangle on a unit sphere Both vertices and angles at the vertices of a triangle are denoted by the same upper case letters A B and C Sides are denoted by lower case letters a b and c The angle A respectively B C may be regarded either as the angle between the two planes that intersect the sphere at the vertex A or equivalently as the angle between the tangents of the great circle arcs where they meet at the vertex Angles are expressed in radians The angles of proper spherical triangles are by convention less than p so that p lt A B C lt 3p Todhunter 1 Art 22 32 In particular the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is strictly greater than the sum of the angles of a triangle defined on the Euclidean plane which is always exactly p radians Sides are also expressed in radians A side regarded as a great circle arc is measured by the angle that it subtends at the centre On the unit sphere this radian measure is numerically equal to the arc length By convention the sides of proper spherical triangles are less than p so that 0 lt a b c lt 2p Todhunter 1 Art 22 32 The sphere s radius is taken as unity For specific practical problems on a sphere of radius R the measured lengths of the sides must be divided by R before using the identities given below Likewise after a calculation on the unit sphere the sides a b c must be multiplied by R Polar triangles Edit nbsp The polar triangle A B C The polar triangle associated with a triangle ABC is defined as follows Consider the great circle that contains the side BC This great circle is defined by the intersection of a diametral plane with the surface Draw the normal to that plane at the centre it intersects the surface at two points and the point that is on the same side of the plane as A is conventionally termed the pole of A and it is denoted by A The points B and C are defined similarly The triangle A B C is the polar triangle corresponding to triangle ABC A very important theorem Todhunter 1 Art 27 proves that the angles and sides of the polar triangle are given by A p a B p b C p c a p A b p B c p C displaystyle begin alignedat 3 A amp pi a amp qquad B amp pi b amp qquad C amp pi c a amp pi A amp b amp pi B amp c amp pi C end alignedat nbsp Therefore if any identity is proved for the triangle ABC then we can immediately derive a second identity by applying the first identity to the polar triangle by making the above substitutions This is how the supplemental cosine equations are derived from the cosine equations Similarly the identities for a quadrantal triangle can be derived from those for a right angled triangle The polar triangle of a polar triangle is the original triangle Cosine rules and sine rules EditCosine rules Edit Main article Spherical law of cosines The cosine rule is the fundamental identity of spherical trigonometry all other identities including the sine rule may be derived from the cosine rule cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A displaystyle cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A nbsp cos b cos c cos a sin c sin a cos B displaystyle cos b cos c cos a sin c sin a cos B nbsp cos c cos a cos b sin a sin b cos C displaystyle cos c cos a cos b sin a sin b cos C nbsp These identities generalize the cosine rule of plane trigonometry to which they are asymptotically equivalent in the limit of small interior angles On the unit sphere if a b c 0 displaystyle a b c rightarrow 0 nbsp set sin a a displaystyle sin a approx a nbsp and cos a cos b 2 0 displaystyle cos a cos b 2 approx 0 nbsp etc see Spherical law of cosines Sine rules Edit Main article Spherical law of sines The spherical law of sines is given by the formula sin A sin a sin B sin b sin C sin c displaystyle frac sin A sin a frac sin B sin b frac sin C sin c nbsp These identities approximate the sine rule of plane trigonometry when the sides are much smaller than the radius of the sphere Derivation of the cosine rule Edit Main article Spherical law of cosines nbsp The spherical cosine formulae were originally proved by elementary geometry and the planar cosine rule Todhunter 1 Art 37 He also gives a derivation using simple coordinate geometry and the planar cosine rule Art 60 The approach outlined here uses simpler vector methods These methods are also discussed at Spherical law of cosines Consider three unit vectors OA OB and OC drawn from the origin to the vertices of the triangle on the unit sphere The arc BC subtends an angle of magnitude a at the centre and therefore OB OC cos a Introduce a Cartesian basis with OA along the z axis and OB in the xz plane making an angle c with the z axis The vector OC projects to ON in the xy plane and the angle between ON and the x axis is A Therefore the three vectors have components OA 0 0 1 displaystyle 0 0 1 nbsp OB sin c 0 cos c displaystyle sin c 0 cos c nbsp OC sin b cos A sin b sin A cos b displaystyle sin b cos A sin b sin A cos b nbsp The scalar product OB OC in terms of the components is OB OC sin c sin b cos A cos c cos b displaystyle sin c sin b cos A cos c cos b nbsp Equating the two expressions for the scalar product gives cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A displaystyle cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A nbsp This equation can be re arranged to give explicit expressions for the angle in terms of the sides cos A cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c displaystyle cos A frac cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c nbsp The other cosine rules are obtained by cyclic permutations Derivation of the sine rule Edit Main article Spherical law of sines This derivation is given in Todhunter 1 Art 40 From the identity sin 2 A 1 cos 2 A displaystyle sin 2 A 1 cos 2 A nbsp and the explicit expression for cos A displaystyle cos A nbsp given immediately above sin 2 A 1 cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c 2 1 cos 2 b 1 cos 2 c cos a cos b cos c 2 sin 2 b sin 2 c sin A sin a 1 cos 2 a cos 2 b cos 2 c 2 cos a cos b cos c 1 2 sin a sin b sin c displaystyle begin aligned sin 2 A amp 1 left frac cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c right 2 5pt amp frac 1 cos 2 b 1 cos 2 c cos a cos b cos c 2 sin 2 b sin 2 c 5pt frac sin A sin a amp frac 1 cos 2 a cos 2 b cos 2 c 2 cos a cos b cos c 1 2 sin a sin b sin c end aligned nbsp Since the right hand side is invariant under a cyclic permutation of a b c displaystyle a b c nbsp the spherical sine rule follows immediately Alternative derivations Edit There are many ways of deriving the fundamental cosine and sine rules and the other rules developed in the following sections For example Todhunter 1 gives two proofs of the cosine rule Articles 37 and 60 and two proofs of the sine rule Articles 40 and 42 The page on Spherical law of cosines gives four different proofs of the cosine rule Text books on geodesy 2 and spherical astronomy 3 give different proofs and the online resources of MathWorld provide yet more 4 There are even more exotic derivations such as that of Banerjee 5 who derives the formulae using the linear algebra of projection matrices and also quotes methods in differential geometry and the group theory of rotations The derivation of the cosine rule presented above has the merits of simplicity and directness and the derivation of the sine rule emphasises the fact that no separate proof is required other than the cosine rule However the above geometry may be used to give an independent proof of the sine rule The scalar triple product OA OB OC evaluates to sin b sin c sin A displaystyle sin b sin c sin A nbsp in the basis shown Similarly in a basis oriented with the z axis along OB the triple product OB OC OA evaluates to sin c sin a sin B displaystyle sin c sin a sin B nbsp Therefore the invariance of the triple product under cyclic permutations gives sin b sin A sin a sin B displaystyle sin b sin A sin a sin B nbsp which is the first of the sine rules See curved variations of the law of sines to see details of this derivation Identities EditSupplemental cosine rules Edit Applying the cosine rules to the polar triangle gives Todhunter 1 Art 47 i e replacing A by p a a by p A etc cos A cos B cos C sin B sin C cos a cos B cos C cos A sin C sin A cos b cos C cos A cos B sin A sin B cos c displaystyle begin aligned cos A amp cos B cos C sin B sin C cos a cos B amp cos C cos A sin C sin A cos b cos C amp cos A cos B sin A sin B cos c end aligned nbsp Cotangent four part formulae Edit The six parts of a triangle may be written in cyclic order as aCbAcB The cotangent or four part formulae relate two sides and two angles forming four consecutive parts around the triangle for example aCbA or BaCb In such a set there are inner and outer parts for example in the set BaCb the inner angle is C the inner side is a the outer angle is B the outer side is b The cotangent rule may be written as Todhunter 1 Art 44 cos i n n e r s i d e cos i n n e r a n g l e cot o u t e r s i d e sin i n n e r s i d e cot o u t e r a n g l e sin i n n e r a n g l e displaystyle cos mathsf inner mathsf side cos mathsf inner mathsf angle cot mathsf outer mathsf side sin mathsf inner mathsf side cot mathsf outer mathsf angle sin mathsf inner mathsf angle nbsp and the six possible equations are with the relevant set shown at right CT1 cos b cos C cot a sin b cot A sin C a C b A CT2 cos b cos A cot c sin b cot C sin A C b A c CT3 cos c cos A cot b sin c cot B sin A b A c B CT4 cos c cos B cot a sin c cot A sin B A c B a CT5 cos a cos B cot c sin a cot C sin B c B a C CT6 cos a cos C cot b sin a cot B sin C B a C b displaystyle begin array lll text CT1 quad amp cos b cos C cot a sin b cot A sin C qquad amp aCbA 0ex text CT2 amp cos b cos A cot c sin b cot C sin A amp CbAc 0ex text CT3 amp cos c cos A cot b sin c cot B sin A amp bAcB 0ex text CT4 amp cos c cos B cot a sin c cot A sin B amp AcBa 0ex text CT5 amp cos a cos B cot c sin a cot C sin B amp cBaC 0ex text CT6 amp cos a cos C cot b sin a cot B sin C amp BaCb end array nbsp To prove the first formula start from the first cosine rule and on the right hand side substitute for cos c displaystyle cos c nbsp from the third cosine rule cos a cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A cos b cos a cos b sin a sin b cos C sin b sin C sin a cot A cos a sin 2 b cos b sin a sin b cos C sin b sin C sin a cot A displaystyle begin aligned cos a amp cos b cos c sin b sin c cos A amp cos b cos a cos b sin a sin b cos C sin b sin C sin a cot A cos a sin 2 b amp cos b sin a sin b cos C sin b sin C sin a cot A end aligned nbsp The result follows on dividing by sin a sin b displaystyle sin a sin b nbsp Similar techniques with the other two cosine rules give CT3 and CT5 The other three equations follow by applying rules 1 3 and 5 to the polar triangle Half angle and half side formulae Edit With 2 s a b c displaystyle 2s a b c nbsp and 2 S A B C displaystyle 2S A B C nbsp sin 1 2 A sin s b sin s c sin b sin c 1 2 sin 1 2 a cos S cos S A sin B sin C 1 2 cos 1 2 A sin s sin s a sin b sin c 1 2 cos 1 2 a cos S B cos S C sin B sin C 1 2 tan 1 2 A sin s b sin s c sin s sin s a 1 2 tan 1 2 a cos S cos S A cos S B cos S C 1 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp sin tfrac 1 2 A left frac sin s b sin s c sin b sin c right 1 2 amp qquad amp sin tfrac 1 2 a left frac cos S cos S A sin B sin C right 1 2 2ex amp cos tfrac 1 2 A left frac sin s sin s a sin b sin c right 1 2 amp qquad amp cos tfrac 1 2 a left frac cos S B cos S C sin B sin C right 1 2 2ex amp tan tfrac 1 2 A left frac sin s b sin s c sin s sin s a right 1 2 amp qquad amp tan tfrac 1 2 a left frac cos S cos S A cos S B cos S C right 1 2 end aligned nbsp Another twelve identities follow by cyclic permutation The proof Todhunter 1 Art 49 of the first formula starts from the identity 2sin2 A 2 1 cosA using the cosine rule to express A in terms of the sides and replacing the sum of two cosines by a product See sum to product identities The second formula starts from the identity 2cos2 A 2 1 cosA the third is a quotient and the remainder follow by applying the results to the polar triangle Delambre analogies Edit The Delambre analogies also called Gauss analogies were published independently by Delambre Gauss and Mollweide in 1807 1809 6 sin 1 2 A B cos 1 2 C cos 1 2 a b cos 1 2 c sin 1 2 A B cos 1 2 C sin 1 2 a b sin 1 2 c cos 1 2 A B sin 1 2 C cos 1 2 a b cos 1 2 c cos 1 2 A B sin 1 2 C sin 1 2 a b sin 1 2 c displaystyle begin aligned frac sin tfrac 1 2 A B cos tfrac 1 2 C frac cos tfrac 1 2 a b cos tfrac 1 2 c amp qquad qquad amp frac sin tfrac 1 2 A B cos tfrac 1 2 C frac sin tfrac 1 2 a b sin tfrac 1 2 c 2ex frac cos tfrac 1 2 A B sin tfrac 1 2 C frac cos tfrac 1 2 a b cos tfrac 1 2 c amp qquad amp frac cos tfrac 1 2 A B sin tfrac 1 2 C frac sin tfrac 1 2 a b sin tfrac 1 2 c end aligned nbsp Another eight identities follow by cyclic permutation Proved by expanding the numerators and using the half angle formulae Todhunter 1 Art 54 and Delambre 7 Napier s analogies Edit tan 1 2 A B cos 1 2 a b cos 1 2 a b cot 1 2 C tan 1 2 a b cos 1 2 A B cos 1 2 A B tan 1 2 c tan 1 2 A B sin 1 2 a b sin 1 2 a b cot 1 2 C tan 1 2 a b sin 1 2 A B sin 1 2 A B tan 1 2 c displaystyle begin aligned amp amp 2ex displaystyle tan tfrac 1 2 A B frac cos tfrac 1 2 a b cos tfrac 1 2 a b cot tfrac 1 2 C amp qquad amp tan tfrac 1 2 a b frac cos tfrac 1 2 A B cos tfrac 1 2 A B tan tfrac 1 2 c 2ex tan tfrac 1 2 A B frac sin tfrac 1 2 a b sin tfrac 1 2 a b cot tfrac 1 2 C amp qquad amp tan tfrac 1 2 a b frac sin tfrac 1 2 A B sin tfrac 1 2 A B tan tfrac 1 2 c end aligned nbsp Another eight identities follow by cyclic permutation These identities follow by division of the Delambre formulae Todhunter 1 Art 52 Taking quotients of these yields the law of tangents first stated by Persian mathematician Nasir al Din al Tusi 1201 1274 tan 1 2 A B tan 1 2 A B tan 1 2 a b tan 1 2 a b displaystyle frac tan tfrac 1 2 A B tan tfrac 1 2 A B frac tan tfrac 1 2 a b tan tfrac 1 2 a b nbsp Napier s rules for right spherical triangles Edit nbsp When one of the angles say C of a spherical triangle is equal to p 2 the various identities given above are considerably simplified There are ten identities relating three elements chosen from the set a b c A B Napier 8 provided an elegant mnemonic aid for the ten independent equations the mnemonic is called Napier s circle or Napier s pentagon when the circle in the above figure right is replaced by a pentagon First write the six parts of the triangle three vertex angles three arc angles for the sides in the order they occur around any circuit of the triangle for the triangle shown above left going clockwise starting with a gives aCbAcB Next replace the parts that are not adjacent to C that is A c B by their complements and then delete the angle C from the list The remaining parts can then be drawn as five ordered equal slices of a pentagram or circle as shown in the above figure right For any choice of three contiguous parts one the middle part will be adjacent to two parts and opposite the other two parts The ten Napier s Rules are given by sine of the middle part the product of the tangents of the adjacent parts sine of the middle part the product of the cosines of the opposite partsThe key for remembering which trigonometric function goes with which part is to look at the first vowel of the kind of part middle parts take the sine adjacent parts take the tangent and opposite parts take the cosine For an example starting with the sector containing a displaystyle a nbsp we have sin a tan p 2 B tan b cos p 2 c cos p 2 A cot B tan b sin c sin A displaystyle sin a tan pi 2 B tan b cos pi 2 c cos pi 2 A cot B tan b sin c sin A nbsp The full set of rules for the right spherical triangle is Todhunter 1 Art 62 R1 cos c cos a cos b R6 tan b cos A tan c R2 sin a sin A sin c R7 tan a cos B tan c R3 sin b sin B sin c R8 cos A sin B cos a R4 tan a tan A sin b R9 cos B sin A cos b R5 tan b tan B sin a R10 cos c cot A cot B displaystyle begin alignedat 4 amp text R1 amp qquad cos c amp cos a cos b amp qquad qquad amp text R6 amp qquad tan b amp cos A tan c amp text R2 amp sin a amp sin A sin c amp amp text R7 amp tan a amp cos B tan c amp text R3 amp sin b amp sin B sin c amp amp text R8 amp cos A amp sin B cos a amp text R4 amp tan a amp tan A sin b amp amp text R9 amp cos B amp sin A cos b amp text R5 amp tan b amp tan B sin a amp amp text R10 amp cos c amp cot A cot B end alignedat nbsp Napier s rules for quadrantal triangles Edit nbsp A quadrantal spherical triangle together with Napier s circle for use in his mnemonicsA quadrantal spherical triangle is defined to be a spherical triangle in which one of the sides subtends an angle of p 2 radians at the centre of the sphere on the unit sphere the side has length p 2 In the case that the side c has length p 2 on the unit sphere the equations governing the remaining sides and angles may be obtained by applying the rules for the right spherical triangle of the previous section to the polar triangle A B C with sides a b c such that A p a a p A etc The results are Q1 cos C cos A cos B Q6 tan B cos a tan C Q2 sin A sin a sin C Q7 tan A cos b tan C Q3 sin B sin b sin C Q8 cos a sin b cos A Q4 tan A tan a sin B Q9 cos b sin a cos B Q5 tan B tan b sin A Q10 cos C cot a cot b displaystyle begin alignedat 4 amp text Q1 amp qquad cos C amp cos A cos B amp qquad qquad amp text Q6 amp qquad tan B amp cos a tan C amp text Q2 amp sin A amp sin a sin C amp amp text Q7 amp tan A amp cos b tan C amp text Q3 amp sin B amp sin b sin C amp amp text Q8 amp cos a amp sin b cos A amp text Q4 amp tan A amp tan a sin B amp amp text Q9 amp cos b amp sin a cos B amp text Q5 amp tan B amp tan b sin A amp amp text Q10 amp cos C amp cot a cot b end alignedat nbsp Five part rules Edit Substituting the second cosine rule into the first and simplifying gives cos a cos a cos c sin a sin c cos B cos c sin b sin c cos A displaystyle cos a cos a cos c sin a sin c cos B cos c sin b sin c cos A nbsp cos a sin 2 c sin a cos c sin c cos B sin b sin c cos A displaystyle cos a sin 2 c sin a cos c sin c cos B sin b sin c cos A nbsp Cancelling the factor of sin c displaystyle sin c nbsp gives cos a sin c sin a cos c cos B sin b cos A displaystyle cos a sin c sin a cos c cos B sin b cos A nbsp Similar substitutions in the other cosine and supplementary cosine formulae give a large variety of 5 part rules They are rarely used Cagnoli s Equation Edit Multiplying the first cosine rule by cos A displaystyle cos A nbsp gives cos a cos A cos b cos c cos A sin b sin c sin b sin c sin 2 A displaystyle cos a cos A cos b cos c cos A sin b sin c sin b sin c sin 2 A nbsp Similarly multiplying the first supplementary cosine rule by cos a displaystyle cos a nbsp yields cos a cos A cos B cos C cos a sin B sin C sin B sin C sin 2 a displaystyle cos a cos A cos B cos C cos a sin B sin C sin B sin C sin 2 a nbsp Subtracting the two and noting that it follows from the sine rules that sin b sin c sin 2 A sin B sin C sin 2 a displaystyle sin b sin c sin 2 A sin B sin C sin 2 a nbsp produces Cagnoli s equation sin b sin c cos b cos c cos A sin B sin C cos B cos C cos a displaystyle sin b sin c cos b cos c cos A sin B sin C cos B cos C cos a nbsp which is a relation between the six parts of the spherical triangle 9 Solution of triangles EditMain article Solution of triangles Solving spherical triangles Oblique triangles Edit The solution of triangles is the principal purpose of spherical trigonometry given three four or five elements of the triangle determine the others The case of five given elements is trivial requiring only a single application of the sine rule For four given elements there is one non trivial case which is discussed below For three given elements there are six cases three sides two sides and an included or opposite angle two angles and an included or opposite side or three angles The last case has no analogue in planar trigonometry No single method solves all cases The figure below shows the seven non trivial cases in each case the given sides are marked with a cross bar and the given angles with an arc The given elements are also listed below the triangle In the summary notation here such as ASA A refers to a given angle and S refers to a given side and the sequence of A s and S s in the notation refers to the corresponding sequence in the triangle nbsp Case 1 three sides given SSS The cosine rule may be used to give the angles A B and C but to avoid ambiguities the half angle formulae are preferred Case 2 two sides and an included angle given SAS The cosine rule gives a and then we are back to Case 1 Case 3 two sides and an opposite angle given SSA The sine rule gives C and then we have Case 7 There are either one or two solutions Case 4 two angles and an included side given ASA The four part cotangent formulae for sets cBaC and BaCb give c and b then A follows from the sine rule Case 5 two angles and an opposite side given AAS The sine rule gives b and then we have Case 7 rotated There are either one or two solutions Case 6 three angles given AAA The supplemental cosine rule may be used to give the sides a b and c but to avoid ambiguities the half side formulae are preferred Case 7 two angles and two opposite sides given SSAA Use Napier s analogies for a and A or use Case 3 SSA or case 5 AAS The solution methods listed here are not the only possible choices many others are possible In general it is better to choose methods that avoid taking an inverse sine because of the possible ambiguity between an angle and its supplement The use of half angle formulae is often advisable because half angles will be less than p 2 and therefore free from ambiguity There is a full discussion in Todhunter The article Solution of triangles Solving spherical triangles presents variants on these methods with a slightly different notation There is a full discussion of the solution of oblique triangles in Todhunter 1 Chap VI See also the discussion in Ross 10 nbsp Solution by right angled triangles Edit Another approach is to split the triangle into two right angled triangles For example take the Case 3 example where b c B are given Construct the great circle from A that is normal to the side BC at the point D Use Napier s rules to solve the triangle ABD use c and B to find the sides AD BD and the angle BAD Then use Napier s rules to solve the triangle ACD that is use AD and b to find the side DC and the angles C and DAC The angle A and side a follow by addition Numerical considerations Edit Not all of the rules obtained are numerically robust in extreme examples for example when an angle approaches zero or p Problems and solutions may have to be examined carefully particularly when writing code to solve an arbitrary triangle Area and spherical excess EditSee also Solid angle and Geodesic polygon nbsp Lexell s theorem the triangles of constant area on a fixed base AB have their free vertex C along a small circle through the points antipodal to A and B Consider an N sided spherical polygon and let An denote the n th interior angle The area of such a polygon is given by Todhunter 1 Art 99 Area of polygon on the unit sphere E N n 1 N A n N 2 p displaystyle text Area of polygon on the unit sphere equiv E N left sum n 1 N A n right N 2 pi nbsp For the case of triangle this reduces to Girard s theorem Area of triangle on the unit sphere E E 3 A B C p displaystyle text Area of triangle on the unit sphere equiv E E 3 A B C pi nbsp where E is the amount by which the sum of the angles exceeds p radians The quantity E is called the spherical excess of the triangle This theorem is named after its author Albert Girard 11 An earlier proof was derived but not published by the English mathematician Thomas Harriot On a sphere of radius R both of the above area expressions are multiplied by R2 The definition of the excess is independent of the radius of the sphere The converse result may be written as A B C p 4 p Area of triangle Area of the sphere displaystyle A B C pi frac 4 pi times text Area of triangle text Area of the sphere nbsp Since the area of a triangle cannot be negative the spherical excess is always positive It is not necessarily small because the sum of the angles may attain 5p 3p for proper angles For example an octant of a sphere is a spherical triangle with three right angles so that the excess is p 2 In practical applications it is often small for example the triangles of geodetic survey typically have a spherical excess much less than 1 of arc Rapp 12 Clarke 13 Legendre s theorem on spherical triangles On the Earth the excess of an equilateral triangle with sides 21 3 km and area 393 km2 is approximately 1 arc second There are many formulae for the excess For example Todhunter 1 Art 101 103 gives ten examples including that of L Huilier tan 1 4 E tan 1 2 s tan 1 2 s a tan 1 2 s b tan 1 2 s c displaystyle tan tfrac 1 4 E sqrt tan tfrac 1 2 s tan tfrac 1 2 s a tan tfrac 1 2 s b tan tfrac 1 2 s c nbsp where s a b c 2 displaystyle s a b c 2 nbsp Because some triangles are badly characterized by their edges e g if a b 1 2 c textstyle a b approx frac 1 2 c nbsp it is often better to use the formula for the excess in terms of two edges and their included angle tan 1 2 E tan 1 2 a tan 1 2 b sin C 1 tan 1 2 a tan 1 2 b cos C displaystyle tan tfrac 1 2 E frac tan frac 1 2 a tan frac 1 2 b sin C 1 tan frac 1 2 a tan frac 1 2 b cos C nbsp When triangle A B C displaystyle ABC nbsp is a right triangle with right angle at C displaystyle C nbsp then cos C 0 displaystyle cos C 0 nbsp and sin C 1 displaystyle sin C 1 nbsp so this reduces to tan 1 2 E tan 1 2 a tan 1 2 b displaystyle tan tfrac 1 2 E tan tfrac 1 2 a tan tfrac 1 2 b nbsp Angle deficit is defined similarly for hyperbolic geometry From latitude and longitude Edit The spherical excess of a spherical quadrangle bounded by the equator the two meridians of longitudes l 1 displaystyle lambda 1 nbsp and l 2 displaystyle lambda 2 nbsp and the great circle arc between two points with longitude and latitude l 1 f 1 displaystyle lambda 1 varphi 1 nbsp and l 2 f 2 displaystyle lambda 2 varphi 2 nbsp istan 1 2 E 4 sin 1 2 f 2 f 1 cos 1 2 f 2 f 1 tan 1 2 l 2 l 1 displaystyle tan tfrac 1 2 E 4 frac sin tfrac 1 2 varphi 2 varphi 1 cos tfrac 1 2 varphi 2 varphi 1 tan tfrac 1 2 lambda 2 lambda 1 nbsp This result is obtained from one of Napier s analogies In the limit where f 1 f 2 l 2 l 1 displaystyle varphi 1 varphi 2 lambda 2 lambda 1 nbsp are all small this reduces to the familiar trapezoidal area E 4 1 2 f 2 f 1 l 2 l 1 textstyle E 4 approx frac 1 2 varphi 2 varphi 1 lambda 2 lambda 1 nbsp The area of a polygon can be calculated from individual quadrangles of the above type from analogously individual triangle bounded by a segment of the polygon and two meridians 14 by a line integral with Green s theorem 15 or via an equal area projection as commonly done in GIS The other algorithms can still be used with the side lengths calculated using a great circle distance formula See also EditAir navigation Celestial navigation Ellipsoidal trigonometry Great circle distance or spherical distance Lenart sphere Schwarz triangle Spherical geometry Spherical polyhedron Triangulation surveying References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Todhunter I 1886 Spherical Trigonometry 5th ed MacMillan Archived from the original on 2020 04 14 Retrieved 2013 07 28 Clarke Alexander Ross 1880 Geodesy Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 2484948 via the Internet Archive Smart W M 1977 Text Book on Spherical Astronomy 6th ed Cambridge University Press Chapter 1 via the Internet Archive Weisstein Eric W Spherical Trigonometry MathWorld Retrieved 8 April 2018 Banerjee Sudipto 2004 Revisiting Spherical Trigonometry with Orthogonal Projectors The College Mathematics Journal Mathematical Association of America 35 5 375 381 doi 10 1080 07468342 2004 11922099 JSTOR 4146847 S2CID 122277398 archived from the original on 2020 07 22 retrieved 2016 01 10 Todhunter Isaac 1873 Note on the history of certain formulae in spherical trigonometry The London Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 45 298 98 100 doi 10 1080 14786447308640820 Delambre J B J 1807 Connaissance des Tems 1809 p 445 Archived from the original on 2020 07 22 Retrieved 2016 05 14 Napier J 1614 Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Constructio p 50 Archived from the original on 2013 04 30 Retrieved 2016 05 14 An 1889 translation The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms is available as en e book from Abe Books Archived 2020 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Chauvenet William 1867 A Treatise on Plane and Spherical Trigonometry Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co p 165 Archived from the original on 2021 07 11 Retrieved 2021 07 11 Ross Debra Anne Master Math Trigonometry Career Press 2002 Another proof of Girard s theorem may be found at 1 Archived 2012 10 31 at the Wayback Machine Rapp Richard H 1991 Geometric Geodesy Part I PDF p 89 permanent dead link pdf page 99 Clarke Alexander Ross 1880 Geodesy Clarendon Press Chapters 2 and 9 Recently republished at Forgotten Books Archived 2020 10 03 at the Wayback Machine Chamberlain Robert G Duquette William H 17 April 2007 Some algorithms for polygons on a sphere Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting NASA JPL Archived from the original on 22 July 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Surface area of polygon on sphere or ellipsoid MATLAB areaint www mathworks com Archived from the original on 2021 05 01 Retrieved 2021 05 01 External links EditWeisstein Eric W Spherical Trigonometry MathWorld a more thorough list of identities with some derivation Weisstein Eric W Spherical Triangle MathWorld a more thorough list of identities with some derivation TriSph A free software to solve the spherical triangles configurable to different practical applications and configured for gnomonic Revisiting Spherical Trigonometry with Orthogonal Projectors by Sudipto Banerjee The paper derives the spherical law of cosines and law of sines using elementary linear algebra and projection matrices A Visual Proof of Girard s Theorem Wolfram Demonstrations Project by Okay Arik The Book of Instruction on Deviant Planes and Simple Planes a manuscript in Arabic that dates back to 1740 and talks about spherical trigonometry with diagrams Some Algorithms for Polygons on a Sphere Robert G Chamberlain William H Duquette Jet Propulsion Laboratory The paper develops and explains many useful formulae perhaps with a focus on navigation and cartography Online computation of spherical triangles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spherical trigonometry amp oldid 1179198970, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.