What is Spherical coordinates: Definition and 351 Discussions

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.
The use of symbols and the order of the coordinates differs among sources and disciplines. This article will use the ISO convention frequently encountered in physics:



(
r
,
θ
,
φ
)


{\displaystyle (r,\theta ,\varphi )}
gives the radial distance, polar angle, and azimuthal angle. In many mathematics books,



(
ρ
,
θ
,
φ
)


{\displaystyle (\rho ,\theta ,\varphi )}
or



(
r
,
θ
,
φ
)


{\displaystyle (r,\theta ,\varphi )}
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. The polar angle is often replaced by the elevation angle measured from the reference plane, so that the elevation angle of zero is at the horizon.
The spherical coordinate system generalizes the two-dimensional polar coordinate system. It can also be extended to higher-dimensional spaces and is then referred to as a hyperspherical coordinate system.

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  1. G

    Constructing an Atlas for ##S^2## with Spherical Coordinates

    Now, this is kind of embarrassing, but I've been trying to do this for too long now and failed: I want to construct an atlas for ##S^2##, but I want to use spherical coordinates rather than stereographic projection. Of course the first chart image is simply ##\theta \in (0, \pi), \varphi \in...
  2. C

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  3. S

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  4. J

    Spherical coordinates of Partial Differential Equation

    Homework Statement I have a PDE and I need to solve it in spherical domain: $$\frac{\partial F(r,t)}{\partial t}=\alpha \frac{1}{r^2} \frac{\partial}{\partial r} r^2 \frac{\partial F(r,t)}{\partial r} +g(r,t) $$ I have BC's: $$ \frac{\partial F}{\partial dr} = 0, r =0$$ $$ \frac{\partial...
  5. S

    Curl of Z-unit vector in spherical coordinates

    Homework Statement There is a sphere of magnetic material in a uniform magnetic field \vec H_0=H_0\vec a_z, and after some calculations I got the magnetic moment vector \vec M_0=M_0\vec a_z, where M_0 is something that isn't important to my question. I am unsure if this magnetic moment vector...
  6. R

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  7. K

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  8. C

    Integrating a delta function with a spherical volume integral

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  9. A

    Cross Products in Spherical Coordinates: Is A x B True?

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  10. E

    Spherical Coordinates Question

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  11. schrodingerscat11

    Charge distribution of point charges in spherical coordinates

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  12. M

    Why is the range of ø in spherical coordinates limited to 0 to π?

    Homework Statement In spherical coordinates (ρ,θ,ø); I understood the ranges of ρ, and θ. But ø, still eludes my understanding. Why is ø only from 0 to π, why not 0 to 2π??
  13. Mr-R

    Is the Metric in Spherical Coordinates Truly Flat?

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  14. S

    Cristoffel Symbol of spherical coordinates

    I just derived the 3-D Cristoffel symbol of the 2nd kind for spherical coordinates. I don't think I made any careless mistakes, but once again, I just want to verify that I am correct and I can't find any place on line that will give me the components of the symbol so I can check myself. Here...
  15. S

    Metric Tensor in Spherical Coordinates

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  16. B

    MHB Triple Integrals in Spherical Coordinates

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  17. H

    Finding Potential (Spherical coordinates )

    1. . An electric dipole located at the origin in free space has a moment p = 3ax −2ay +az nC·m. Find V at r = 2.5, θ =30◦, φ =40◦. I find it difficult to solve when its in spherical co-ordinates.2.Relevent Eq V =P.(r-r')/( 4∏ε|r−r'|2)(|r-r'|)I am confused how to find a unit vector on spherical...
  18. M

    Divergence of curl in spherical coordinates

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  19. J

    Write a triple integral in spherical coordinates

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  20. U

    Spherical coordinates choice for an electric field problem

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  21. T

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  22. S

    Transforming a vector in spherical coordinates

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  23. U

    Spherical coordinates length from differential length

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  24. J

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  25. M

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  26. H

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  27. DrClaude

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  28. Y

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  29. MattRob

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  30. A

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  31. A

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  32. M

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  33. A

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  34. W

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  35. Petrus

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  36. V

    Nabla Operator in Spherical Coordinates

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  37. B

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  38. E

    Deriving equations of motion in spherical coordinates

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  39. W

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  40. W

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  41. H

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  42. B

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  43. Y

    Partial derivative in Spherical Coordinates

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  44. L

    Rotation in spherical coordinates

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  45. U

    Jacobian in spherical coordinates?

    Hi, Started to learn about Jacobians recently and found something I do not understand. Say there is a vector field F(r, phi, theta), and I want to find the flux across the surface of a sphere. eg: ∫∫F⋅dA Do I need to use the Jacobian if the function is already in spherical...
  46. E

    Differentiation spherical coordinates

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  47. Y

    Divergence in spherical coordinates.

    I want to verify: \vec A=\hat R \frac{k}{R^2}\;\hbox{ where k is a constant.} \nabla\cdot\vec A=\frac{1}{R^2}\frac{\partial (R^2A_R)}{\partial R}+\frac{1}{R\sin\theta}\frac{\partial (A_{\theta}\sin\theta)}{\partial \theta}+\frac{1}{R\sin\theta}\frac{\partial A_{\phi}}{\partial \phi}...
  48. Ackbach

    MoI of a Sphere using Spherical Coordinates

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  49. I

    How to deduct the gradient in spherical coordinates?

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  50. N

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