A Conversation for Trigonometry
minor quibble
D L H Started conversation Dec 15, 2000
Very well done....but applies to plane trigonometry. The Universe has more general relations. Look at a triangle on the surface of the Earth. View a triangle formed by a section of the equator and two lines from the North pole- it has 2 right angles and a third included angle. Other geometries (torus etc.) are more complex yet. This was great but should say Plane.
minor quibble
Richard Posted Jul 20, 2001
By definition, a triangle is a polygon with three points. Whether expressed in two dimensions or three, it will always lie on a flat plane. The triangle you refer to is not a polygon. It is the intersection of a spherical shell and three planes.
Cheers,
Ricky P.
minor quibble
dysprosia Posted Apr 12, 2002
You're both right. The trig here is in Euclidean geometry. The trig the other guy was referring to is in spherical (Riemannian geometry). They're both valid geometries, and trig in each is valid too. Perhaps someone might do an entry in spherical trig: there's lots of info to do it...maybe I might do it, lol
minor quibble
Calculator Nerd 256 Posted Dec 21, 2002
well, we know how to get from cartesian coords to spherical coords, if that helps
assuming Y is vertical:
theta = arctangent(X / Z)
phi = arctangent(Y / (the square root of (X^2 + Z^2)))
rho = the square root of (X^2 + Y^2 + Z^2)
and spherical to cartesian is:
X = rho * cosine(phi) * cosine(theta)
Y = rho * sine(phi)
Z = rho * cosine(phi) * sine(theta)
i don't know why i told you guys this, i just thought you might want to know
>8^B
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