Two-center bipolar coordinates
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In mathematics, two-center bipolar coordinates is a coordinate system based on two coordinates which give distances from two fixed centers and .[1] This system is very useful in some scientific applications (e.g. calculating the electric field of a dipole on a plane).[2][3]
Transformation to Cartesian coordinates
When the centers are at and , the transformation to Cartesian coordinates from two-center bipolar coordinates is
Transformation to polar coordinates
When x > 0, the transformation to polar coordinates from two-center bipolar coordinates is
where is the distance between the poles (coordinate system centers).
Applications
Polar plotters use two-center bipolar coordinates to describe the drawing paths required to draw a target image.
See also
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References
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".
- ↑ R. Price, The Periodic Standing Wave Approximation: Adapted coordinates and spectral methods.
- ↑ The periodic standing-wave approximation: nonlinear scalar fields, adapted coordinates, and the eigenspectral method.
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