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Spherical Coordinate System: Angle, or Inclination Angle

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Spherical Coordinate System: Angle, or Inclination Angle

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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 point
is specified by three numbers: the radial distance of that point
from a fixed origin, its polar angle measured from a fixed zenith
direction, and the azimuthal angle of its orthogonal projection on
a reference plane that passes through the origin and is orthogonal
to the zenith, measured from a fixed reference direction on that
plane. It can be seen as the three-dimensional version of the polar
coordinate system.

The radial distance is also called the radius or radial coordinate.


The polar angle may be called colatitude, zenith angle, normal
angle, or inclination angle.
Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as
The use of symbols and the order of the coordinates differs commonly used in physics (ISO
convention): radial distance r, polar
among sources and disciplines. This article will use the ISO
angle θ (theta), and azimuthal angle φ
convention frequently encountered in physics: gives the
(phi). The symbol ρ (rho) is often used
radial distance, polar angle, and azimuthal angle. In many instead of r.
mathematics books, or gives the radial
distance, azimuthal angle, and polar angle, switching the
meanings of θ and φ. Other conventions are also used, such as r
for radius from the z-axis, so great care needs to be taken to
check the meaning of the symbols.

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 and
measure the azimuthal angle counterclockwise from the x-axis to
the y-axis rather than clockwise from north (0°) to east (+90°)
like the horizontal coordinate system.[1] The polar angle is often Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as often
replaced by the elevation angle measured from the reference used in mathematics: radial distance r,
plane, so that the elevation angle of zero is at the horizon. azimuthal angle θ, and polar angle φ.
The meanings of θ and φ have been
The spherical coordinate system generalizes the two-dimensional swapped compared to the physics
polar coordinate system. It can also be extended to higher- convention.
dimensional spaces and is then referred to as a hyperspherical
coordinate system.

Contents
Definition
Conventions
Unique coordinates
Plotting
Applications
In geography
In astronomy
Coordinate system conversions
Cartesian coordinates
Cylindrical coordinates
Modified spherical coordinates
Integration and differentiation in spherical coordinates
Distance in Spherical Coordinates
A globe showing the radial distance,
Kinematics polar angle and azimuthal angle of a
See also point P with respect to a unit sphere, in
the mathematics convention. In this
Notes
image, r equals 4/6, θ equals 90°, and φ
Bibliography equals 30°.
External links

Definition
To define a spherical coordinate system, one must choose two orthogonal directions, the zenith and the
azimuth reference, and an origin point in space. These choices determine a reference plane that contains the
origin and is perpendicular to the zenith. The spherical coordinates of a point P are then 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 angle between the zenith direction and the line segment
OP.
The azimuth (or azimuthal angle) is the signed angle measured from the azimuth reference
direction to the orthogonal projection of the line segment OP on the reference plane.

The sign of the azimuth is determined by choosing what is a positive sense of turning about the zenith. This
choice is arbitrary, and is part of the coordinate system's definition.

π
The elevation angle is 90 degrees ( 2 radians) minus the inclination angle.

If the inclination is zero or 180 degrees (π radians), the azimuth is arbitrary. If the radius is zero, both
azimuth and inclination are arbitrary.

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

Conventions

Several different conventions exist for representing the three coordinates, and for the order in which they
should be written. The use of to denote radial distance, inclination (or elevation), and azimuth,
respectively, is common practice in physics, and is specified by ISO standard 80000-2:2009, and earlier in
ISO 31-11 (1992).
However, some authors (including mathematicians) use ρ for radial distance, φ for inclination (or elevation)
and θ for azimuth, and r for radius from the z-axis, which "provides a logical extension of the usual polar
coordinates notation".[2] Some authors may also list the azimuth before the inclination (or elevation). Some
combinations of these choices result in a left-handed coordinate system. The standard convention
conflicts with the usual notation for two-dimensional polar coordinates and three-dimensional cylindrical
coordinates, where θ is often used for the azimuth.[2]

The angles are typically measured in degrees (°) or radians (rad), where 360° = 2π rad. Degrees are most
common in geography, astronomy, and engineering, whereas radians are commonly used in mathematics and
theoretical physics. The unit for radial distance is usually determined by the context.

When the system is used for physical three-space, it is customary to use positive sign for azimuth angles that
are measured in the counter-clockwise 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 positive azimuth (longitude) angles are measured eastwards from some
prime meridian.

Major conventions
corresponding local geographical directions
coordinates right/left-handed
(Z, X, Y)
(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). Local azimuth angle would be
measured, e.g., counterclockwise from S to E in the case of (U, S, E).

Unique coordinates

Any spherical coordinate triplet specifies a single point of three-dimensional space. On the other
hand, every point has infinitely many equivalent spherical coordinates. One can add or subtract any number
of full turns to either angular measure without changing the angles themselves, and therefore without
changing the point. It is also convenient, in many contexts, to allow negative radial distances, with the
convention that is equivalent to for any r, θ, and φ. Moreover, is equivalent
to .

If it is necessary to define a unique set of spherical coordinates for each point, one must restrict their ranges.
A common choice is

r ≥ 0,
0° ≤ θ ≤ 180° (π rad),
0° ≤ φ < 360° (2π rad).
However, the azimuth φ is often restricted to the interval (−180°, +180°], or (−π, +π] in radians, instead of
[0, 360°). This is the standard convention for geographic longitude.

The range [0°, 180°] for inclination is equivalent to [−90°, +90°] for elevation (latitude).
Even with these restrictions, if θ is 0° or 180° (elevation is 90° or −90°) then the azimuth angle is arbitrary;
and if r is zero, both azimuth and inclination/elevation are arbitrary. To make the coordinates unique, one
can use the convention that in these cases the arbitrary coordinates are zero.

Plotting

To plot a dot from its spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ), where θ is inclination, move r units from the origin in
the zenith direction, rotate by θ about the origin towards the azimuth reference direction, and rotate by φ
about the zenith in the proper direction.

Applications
The geographic coordinate system uses the azimuth and elevation of the spherical coordinate system to
express locations on Earth, calling them respectively longitude and latitude. Just as the two-dimensional
Cartesian coordinate system is useful on the plane, a two-dimensional spherical coordinate system is useful
on the surface of a sphere. In this system, the sphere is taken as a unit sphere, so the radius is unity and can
generally be ignored. This simplification can also be very useful when dealing with objects such as
rotational matrices.

Spherical coordinates are useful in analyzing systems that have some degree of symmetry about a point,
such as volume integrals inside a sphere, the potential energy field surrounding a concentrated mass or
charge, or global weather simulation in a planet's atmosphere. A sphere that has the Cartesian equation
x2 + y2 + z2 = c2 has the simple equation r = c in spherical coordinates.
Two important partial differential equations that arise in many physical problems, Laplace's equation and the
Helmholtz equation, allow a separation of variables in spherical coordinates. 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.

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.

The spherical coordinate system is also commonly used in 3D game


development to rotate the camera around the player's position.

In geography

To a first approximation, the geographic coordinate system uses


elevation angle (latitude) in degrees north of the equator plane, in the
range −90° ≤ φ ≤ 90°, instead of inclination. Latitude is either
geocentric latitude, measured at the Earth's center and designated
variously by ψ, q, φ′, φc, φg or geodetic latitude, measured by the
The output pattern of an industrial
observer's local vertical, and commonly designated φ. The azimuth loudspeaker shown using spherical
angle (longitude), commonly denoted by λ, is measured in degrees polar plots taken at six frequencies
east or west from some conventional reference meridian (most
commonly the IERS Reference Meridian), so its domain is −180° ≤ λ ≤ 180°. 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.

The polar angle, which is 90° minus the latitude and ranges from 0 to 180°, is called colatitude in geography.

Instead of the radial distance, geographers commonly use altitude above or below some reference surface,
which may be the sea level or "mean" surface level for planets without liquid oceans. The radial distance r
can be computed from the altitude by adding the mean radius of the planet's reference surface, which is
approximately 6,360 ± 11 km (3,952 ± 7 miles) for Earth.

However, modern geographical coordinate systems are quite complex, and the positions implied by these
simple formulae may be wrong 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.

In astronomy

In astronomy there are a series of spherical coordinate systems that measure the elevation angle from
different fundamental planes. These reference planes are the observer's horizon, the celestial equator
(defined by Earth's rotation), the plane of the ecliptic (defined by Earth's orbit around the Sun), the plane of
the earth terminator (normal to the instantaneous direction to the Sun), and the galactic equator (defined by
the rotation of the Milky Way).

Coordinate system conversions


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

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

y
The inverse tangent denoted in φ = arctan 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

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.

Modified spherical 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 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


The following equations (Iyanaga 1977) assume that the
colatitude θ is the inclination from the z (polar) axis (ambiguous
since x, y, and z are mutually normal), 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

Unit vectors in spherical coordinates

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

The general form of the formula to prove the differential line element, is[3]
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 calculate how changes with each of the coordinates. In the
conventions used,

Thus,

The desired coefficients are the magnitudes of these vectors:[3]

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 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 gradient, divergence, curl and
Laplacian,

Further, the inverse Jacobian in Cartesian coordinates is

The metric tensor in the spherical coordinate system is .

Distance in Spherical Coordinates


In spherical coordinates, given 2 points with φ being the azimuthal coordinate

The distance between the two points can be expressed as

Kinematics
In spherical coordinates, the position of a point is written as

Its velocity is then

and its acceleration is

The angular momentum is

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

See also
Celestial coordinate system
Coordinate system
Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates
Elevation (ballistics)
Euler angles
Gimbal lock
Hypersphere
Jacobian matrix and determinant
List of canonical coordinate transformations
Sphere
Spherical harmonic
Theodolite
Vector fields in cylindrical and spherical coordinates
Yaw, pitch, and roll

Notes
1. Duffett-Smith, P and Zwart, J, p. 34.
2. Eric W. Weisstein (2005-10-26). "Spherical Coordinates" (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Spheri
calCoordinates.html). MathWorld. Retrieved 2010-01-15.
3. "Line element (dl) in spherical coordinates derivation/diagram" (https://math.stackexchange.co
m/q/74503). Stack Exchange. October 21, 2011.

Bibliography
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 (https://lccn.loc.gov/52011515).
Margenau H, Murphy GM (1956). The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry (https://archive.o
rg/details/mathematicsofphy0002marg). New York: D. van Nostrand. pp. 177–178 (https://archi
ve.org/details/mathematicsofphy0002marg/page/177). LCCN 55010911 (https://lccn.loc.gov/55
010911).
Korn GA, Korn TM (1961). Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers. New York:
McGraw-Hill. pp. 174–175. LCCN 59014456 (https://lccn.loc.gov/59014456). ASIN
B0000CKZX7.
Sauer R, Szabó I (1967). Mathematische Hilfsmittel des Ingenieurs. New York: Springer
Verlag. pp. 95–96. LCCN 67025285 (https://lccn.loc.gov/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
Hazewinkel, Michiel, ed. (2001) [1994], "Spherical coordinates" (https://www.encyclopediaofma
th.org/index.php?title=p/s086660), Encyclopedia of Mathematics, Springer Science+Business
Media B.V. / Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-1-55608-010-4
MathWorld description of spherical coordinates (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SphericalCoordi
nates.html)
Coordinate Converter — converts between polar, Cartesian and spherical coordinates (http://w
ww.random-science-tools.com/maths/coordinate-converter.htm)

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