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Spyth

1. The document discusses spherical trigonometry and proves several key formulas: - The spherical Pythagorean theorem relating the sides and cosine of angles of a spherical right triangle. 2. It proves the spherical law of sines relating the sines of the angles and opposite sides for any spherical triangle. 3. It proves the spherical law of cosines relating the cosines of the angles and sides for any spherical triangle.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
140 views5 pages

Spyth

1. The document discusses spherical trigonometry and proves several key formulas: - The spherical Pythagorean theorem relating the sides and cosine of angles of a spherical right triangle. 2. It proves the spherical law of sines relating the sines of the angles and opposite sides for any spherical triangle. 3. It proves the spherical law of cosines relating the cosines of the angles and sides for any spherical triangle.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Spherical trigonometry

1 The spherical Pythagorean theorem

Proposition 1.1 On a sphere of radius R, any right triangle 4ABC with ∠C being the right angle
satisfies
cos(c/R) = cos(a/R) cos(b/R). (1)

Proof: Let O be the center of the sphere, we may assume its coordinates are (0, 0, 0). We may rotate
−→
the sphere so that A has coordinates OA = (R, 0, 0) and C lies in the xy-plane, see Figure 1. Rotating

B
y

O(0, 0, 0) C

A(R, 0, 0)

Figure 1: The Pythagorean theorem for a spherical right triangle

around the z axis by β := ∠AOC takes A into C. The edge OA moves in the xy-plane, by β, thus
−−→
the coordinates of C are OC = (R cos(β), R sin(β), 0). Since we have a right angle at C, the plane
of 4OBC is perpendicular to the plane of 4OAC and it contains the z axis. An orthonormal basis
−−→ −→
of the plane of 4OBC is given by 1/R · OC = (cos(β), sin(β), 0) and the vector OZ := (0, 0, 1). A
rotation around O in this plane by α := ∠BOC takes C into B:
−−→ −−→ −→
OB = cos(α) · OC + sin(α) · R · OZ = (R cos(β) cos(α), R sin(β) cos(α), R sin(α)).
Introducing γ := ∠AOB, we have
−→ −−→
OA · OB R2 cos(α) cos(β)
cos(γ) = = .
R2 R2
The statement now follows from α = a/R, β = b/R and γ = c/R. ♦

To prove the rest of the formulas of spherical trigonometry, we need to show the following.

1
Proposition 1.2 Any spherical right triangle 4ABC with ∠C being the right angle satisfies
sin Ra

sin(A) =  and (2)
sin Rc

tan Rb

cos(A) = . (3)
tan Rc

Proof: After replacing a/R, b/R and c/R with a, b, and c we may assume R = 1. This time we
−−→
rotate the triangle in such a way that OC = (0, 0, 1), A is in the xz plane and B is in the yz-plane,
see Figure 2. A rotation around O in the xz plane by b = ∠AOC takes C into A, thus we have

z
C(0, 0, 1)

A
y
O(0, 0, 0)

Figure 2: Computing the sines and cosines in a spherical right triangle

−→
OA = (sin(b), 0, cos(b)).

Similarly, a rotation around O in the yz-plane by a = ∠BOC takes C into B, thus we have
−−→
OB = (0, sin(a), cos(a)).
−→ −−→ −→ −−→
The angle A is between OA × OB and OA × OC. Here
−→ −−→ −→ −−→
OA × OB = (− cos(b) sin(a), − sin(b) cos(a), sin(a) sin(b)) and OA × OC = (0, − sin(b), 0).
−→ −−→ −→ −−→ −→ −−→
The length of OA × OB is OA · OB · sin(c) = sin(c), the length of OA × OC is sin(b).

To prove (2) we use the fact that


−→ −−→ −→ −−→ −→ −−→ −→ −−→
( OA × OB) × (OA × OC) = OA × OB · OA × OC · sin(A). (4)

2
Since

(− cos(b) sin(a), − sin(b) cos(a), sin(a) sin(b)) × (0, − sin(b), 0) = (sin(a) sin2 (b), 0, sin(b) cos(b) sin(a))

the left hand side of (4) is


q q
sin2 (a) sin4 (b) + sin2 (b) cos2 (b) sin2 (a) = sin(b) sin(a) sin2 (b) + cos2 (b) = sin(b) sin(a).

The right hand side of (4) is is sin(b) sin(c) sin(A). Thus we have

sin(b) sin(a) = sin(b) sin(c) sin(A),

yielding (2).

To prove (3) we use the fact that


−→ −−→ −→ −−→ −→ −−→ −→ −−→
(OA × OB) · (OA × OC) = OA × OB · OA × OC · cos(A). (5)

The left hand side is sin2 (b) cos(a), the right hand side is sin(b) sin(c) cos(A). Thus we obtain

sin2 (b) cos(a) = sin(b) sin(c) cos(A),

yielding
sin(b) cos(a) tan(b) cos(a) cos(b)
cos(A) = = · .
sin(c) tan(c) cos(c)
Equation (3) now follows from Proposition 1.1. ♦

2 General spherical triangles

To prove the spherical laws of sines and cosines, we will use the Figure 3.

B
c a
h

A b1 B1 b2 C

Figure 3: A general spherical triangle

Theorem 2.1 (Spherical law of sines) Any spherical triangle satisfies

sin(A) sin(B) sin(C)


= = .
sin(a/R) sin(b/R) sin(c/R)

3
Proof: Applying (2) to the right triangle ABB1 yields

sin(h/R)
sin(A) = .
sin(c/R)

This equation allows us to express sin(h/R) as follows:

sin(h/R) = sin(A) sin(c/R).

Similarly, applying (2) to the right triangle CBB1 allows us to write

sin(h/R) = sin(C) sin(a/R).

Therefore we have
sin(A/R) sin(c/R) = sin(C) sin(a/R),
since both sides equal sin(h/R). Dividing both sides by sin(a/R) sin(c/R) yields

sin(A) sin(C)
= .
sin(a/R) sin(c/R)
The equality
sin(A) sin(B)
=
sin(a/R) sin(b/R)
may be shown in a completely similar fashion. ♦

Theorem 2.2 (Spherical law of cosines) Any spherical triangle satisfies

cos(a/R) = cos(b/R) cos(c/R) + sin(b/R) sin(c/R) cos(A).

Proof: Applying (1) to the right triangle 4BB1 C yields

cos(a/R) = cos(b2 /R) cos(h/R)

Let us replace b2 with b − b1 in the above equation. After applying the formula cos(x − y) =
cos(x) cos(y) + sin(x) sin(y) we obtain

cos(a/R) = cos(b/R) cos(b1 /R) cos(h/R) + sin(b/R) sin(b1 /R) cos(h/R).

Applying (1) to the right triangle 4BB1 A we may replace both occurrences of cos(h/R) above with
cos(c/R)/ cos(b1 /R) and obtain

cos(c/R)
cos(a/R) = cos(b/R) cos(c/R) + sin(b/R) sin(b1 /R) , that is,
cos(b1 /R)

tan(b1 /R)
cos(a/R) = cos(b/R) cos(c/R) + sin(b/R) sin(c/R) .
tan(c/R)
Finally, (3) applied to the right triangle 4BB1 A allows replacing tan(b1 /R)/ tan(c/R) with cos(A).

4
To obtain the spherical law of cosines for angles, we may apply the preceding theorem to the polar
triangle of the triangle 4ABC. This one has sides a0 = (π − A)R, b0 = (π − B)R and c0 = (π − C)R
and angles A0 = π − a/R, B 0 = π − b/R and C 0 = π − c/R. The spherical law of cosines for the triangle
4A0 B 0 C 0 states

cos(a0 /R) = cos(b0 /R) cos(c0 /R) + sin(b0 /R) sin(c0 /R) cos(A0 ), that is,

cos(π − A) = cos(π − B) cos(π − C) + sin(π − B) sin(π − C) cos(π − a/R).


Using cos(π − x) = − cos(x) and sin(π − x) = sin(x), after multiplying both sides by (−1) we obtain

cos(A) = − cos(B) cos(C) + sin(B) sin(C) cos(a/R). (6)

References

[1] D. Royster, “Non-Euclidean Geometry and a Little on How We Got There,” Lecture notes, May
7, 2012.

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