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Spherical coordinate system

The location of a point in three-dimensional space can be represented in various ways, but three numbers are always required. Spherical coordinates have coordinates typically named , &phi, &theta where the radius range from 0 to , the azimuth &phi range from 0 to , and the colatitude &theta range from 0 to π. They describe a point in space as follows: from the origin , go units along the z-axis, rotate &phi down from the z-axis in the x-z plane (azimuth or longitude), and rotate &theta counterclockwise about the z-axis (colatitude). The name of the system comes from the fact that the simple equation = 1 describes the unit sphere.

There are conversions between Cartesian and spherical coordinates based on trigonometric functions. Both spherical coordinates and cylindrical coordinates are extensions of the two dimensional polar coordinate system. Spherical coordinates are the natural coordinates for physical situations where there is spherical symmetry. In such a situation, one can describe waves using spherical harmonics.

Unlike Cartesian coordinates, spherical coordinates include some redundancy in naming points, especially ones on the z-axis. For instance, (1, 0°, 0°), (1, 0°, 45°), and (-1, 180°, 270°) all describe the same point. Spherical coordinates emphasize distance from the origin. One application is ergodynamic design, where is the arm length of a stationary person and the angles describe the direction of the arm as it reaches out.

Table of contents
1 Conversion from spherical to Cartesian coordinates
2 Conversion from Cartesian to spherical coordinates
3 See also

Conversion from spherical to Cartesian coordinates

Conversion from Cartesian to spherical coordinates

See also





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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Spherical coordinate system".