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.

Angular displacement
The angle of rotation from the black ray to the green segment is 60°, from the black ray to the blue segment is 210°, and from the green to the blue segment is 210° − 60° = 150°. A complete rotation about the center point is equal to 1 tr, 360°, or 2π radians.
Other names
rotational displacement, angle of rotation
Common symbols
θ, ϑ, φ
SI unitradians, degrees, turns, etc. (any angular unit)
In SI base unitsradians (rad)

Context

edit
 
Rotation of a rigid body P about a fixed axis O.

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
 
Figure 1: Euler's rotation theorem. A great circle transforms to another great circle under rotations, leaving always a diameter of the sphere in its original position.
 
Figure 2: A rotation represented by an Euler axis and angle.

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  

 
The computation rules for infinitesimal rotation matrices are as usual except that infinitesimals of second order are routinely dropped. With these rules, these matrices do not satisfy all the same properties as ordinary finite rotation matrices under the usual treatment of infinitesimals.[5] It turns out that the order in which infinitesimal rotations are applied is irrelevant.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ 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)
  2. ^ The International System of Units (PDF) (9th ed.), International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Dec 2022, ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0
  3. ^ 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]
  4. ^ Kleppner, Daniel; Kolenkow, Robert (1973). An Introduction to Mechanics. McGraw-Hill. pp. 288–89. ISBN 9780070350489.
  5. ^ (Goldstein, Poole & Safko 2002, §4.8)

Sources

edit