Angular displacement
Angular displacement | |
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Other names | rotational displacement, angle of rotation |
Common symbols | θ, ϑ, φ |
SI unit | radians, degrees, turns, etc. (any angular unit) |
In SI base units | radians (rad) |
Part of a series on |
Classical mechanics |
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The angular displacement (symbol θ, ϑ, or φ) – also called angle of rotation, rotational displacement, or rotary displacement – of a physical body is the angle (in units of radians, degrees, turns, etc.) through which the body rotates (revolves or spins) around a centre or axis of rotation. Angular displacement may be signed, indicating the sense of rotation (e.g., clockwise); it may also be greater (in absolute value) than a full turn.
Context
[edit]When a body rotates about its axis, the motion cannot simply be analyzed as a particle, as in circular motion it undergoes a changing velocity and acceleration at any time. When dealing with the rotation of a body, it becomes simpler to consider the body itself rigid. A body is generally considered rigid when the separations between all the particles remains constant throughout the body's motion, so for example parts of its mass are not flying off. In a realistic sense, all things can be deformable, however this impact is minimal and negligible.
Example
[edit]In the example illustrated to the right (or above in some mobile versions), a particle or body P is at a fixed distance r from the origin, O, rotating counterclockwise. It becomes important to then represent the position of particle P in terms of its polar coordinates (r, θ). In this particular example, the value of θ is changing, while the value of the radius remains the same. (In rectangular coordinates (x, y) both x and y vary with time.) As the particle moves along the circle, it travels an arc length s, which becomes related to the angular position through the relationship:
Definition and units
[edit]Angular displacement may be expressed in radians or degrees. Using radians provides a very simple relationship between distance traveled around the circle (circular arc length) and the distance r from the centre (radius):
For example, if a body rotates 360° around a circle of radius r, the angular displacement is given by the distance traveled around the circumference - which is 2πr - divided by the radius: which easily simplifies to: . Therefore, 1 revolution is radians.
The above definition is part of the International System of Quantities (ISQ), formalized in the international standard ISO 80000-3 (Space and time),[1] and adopted in the International System of Units (SI).[2][3]
Angular displacement may be signed, indicating the sense of rotation (e.g., clockwise);[1] it may also be greater (in absolute value) than a full turn. In the ISQ/SI, angular displacement is used to define the number of revolutions, N=θ/(2π rad), a ratio-type quantity of dimension one.
In three dimensions
[edit]In three dimensions, angular displacement is an entity with a direction and a magnitude. The direction specifies the axis of rotation, which always exists by virtue of the Euler's rotation theorem; the magnitude specifies the rotation in radians about that axis (using the right-hand rule to determine direction). This entity is called an axis-angle.
Despite having direction and magnitude, angular displacement is not a vector because it does not obey the commutative law for addition.[4] Nevertheless, when dealing with infinitesimal rotations, second order infinitesimals can be discarded and in this case commutativity appears.
Rotation matrices
[edit]Several ways to describe rotations exist, like rotation matrices or Euler angles. See charts on SO(3) for others.
Given that any frame in the space can be described by a rotation matrix, the displacement among them can also be described by a rotation matrix. Being and two matrices, the angular displacement matrix between them can be obtained as . When this product is performed having a very small difference between both frames we will obtain a matrix close to the identity.
In the limit, we will have an infinitesimal rotation matrix.
Infinitesimal rotation matrices
[edit]An infinitesimal rotation matrix or differential rotation matrix is a matrix representing an infinitely small rotation.
While a rotation matrix is an orthogonal matrix representing an element of (the special orthogonal group), the differential of a rotation is a skew-symmetric matrix in the tangent space (the special orthogonal Lie algebra), which is not itself a rotation matrix.
An infinitesimal rotation matrix has the form
where is the identity matrix, is vanishingly small, and
For example, if representing an infinitesimal three-dimensional rotation about the x-axis, a basis element of
See also
[edit]- Angular distance
- Angular frequency
- Angular position
- Angular velocity
- Azimuth
- Infinitesimal rotation
- Linear elasticity
- Second moment of area
- Unwrapped phase
References
[edit]- ^ a b "ISO 80000-3:2019 Quantities and units — Part 3: Space and time" (2 ed.). International Organization for Standardization. 2019. Retrieved 2019-10-23. [1] (11 pages)
- ^ The International System of Units (PDF) (9th ed.), International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Dec 2022, ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0
- ^ Thompson, Ambler; Taylor, Barry N. (2020-03-04) [2009-07-02]. "The NIST Guide for the Use of the International System of Units, Special Publication 811" (2008 ed.). National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved 2023-07-17. [2]
- ^ Kleppner, Daniel; Kolenkow, Robert (1973). An Introduction to Mechanics. McGraw-Hill. pp. 288–89. ISBN 9780070350489.
- ^ (Goldstein, Poole & Safko 2002, §4.8)
Sources
[edit]- Goldstein, Herbert; Poole, Charles P.; Safko, John L. (2002), Classical Mechanics (third ed.), Addison Wesley, ISBN 978-0-201-65702-9
- Wedderburn, Joseph H. M. (1934), Lectures on Matrices, AMS, ISBN 978-0-8218-3204-2