Jump to content

Steradian

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
steradian
A graphical representation of two different steradians.
The sphere has radius r, and in this case the area A of the highlighted spherical cap is r2. The solid angle Ω equals [A/r2] sr which is 1 sr in this example. The entire sphere has a solid angle of 4π sr.
General information
Unit systemSI
Unit ofsolid angle
Symbolsr
Conversions
1 sr in ...... is equal to ...
   SI base units   1 m2/m2
   square degrees   1802/π2 deg2
3282.8 deg2

The steradian (symbol: sr) or square radian[1][2] is the unit of solid angle in the International System of Units (SI). It is used in three dimensional geometry, and is analogous to the radian, which quantifies planar angles. A solid angle in steradians, projected onto a sphere, gives the area of a spherical cap on the surface, whereas an angle in radians, projected onto a circle, gives a length of a circular arc on the circumference. The name is derived from the Greek στερεός stereos 'solid' + radian.

In the International System of units (Système Internationale d'unités or SI), the steradian is considered to be a dimensionless unit, the quotient of the area subtended and the square of its distance from the centre. Both the numerator and denominator of this ratio have dimension length squared (i.e. L2/L2 = 1, dimensionless). In the SI, "solid angle" is the number of steradians in the physical solid angle, so the SI "steradian" is the number of physical steradians in one physical steradian. It is useful, however, to distinguish between dimensionless quantities of a different kind, such as the radian (in the SI, a ratio of quantities of dimension length), so the symbol sr is used to indicate a physical solid angle. The steradian is defined as one square radian: sr = 1 rad2. The SI "steradian" is therefore "sr" = (1 sr)/sr = 1. For example, radiant intensity can be measured in watts per steradian (W⋅sr−1). The steradian was formerly an SI supplementary unit, but this category was abolished in 1995 and the steradian is now considered an SI derived unit.

Solid angle of countries and other entities relative to the centre of Earth.

Definition

[edit]

A steradian can be defined as the solid angle subtended at the centre of a unit sphere by a unit area on its surface. For a general sphere of radius r, any portion of its surface with area A = r2 subtends one steradian at its centre.[3]

The solid angle is related to the area it cuts out of a sphere:

where

  • Ω is the solid angle
  • A is the surface area of the spherical cap, ,
  • r is the radius of the sphere,
  • h is the height of the cap, and
  • sr is the unit, steradian.

Because the surface area A of a sphere is 4πr2, the definition implies that a sphere subtends 4π steradians (≈ 12.56637 sr) at its centre, or that a steradian subtends 1/4π ≈ 0.07958 of a sphere. By the same argument, the maximum solid angle that can be subtended at any point is 4π sr.

Other properties

[edit]
Section of cone (1) and spherical cap (2) that subtend a solid angle of one steradian inside a sphere

The area of a spherical cap is A = 2πrh, where h is the "height" of the cap. If A = r2, then . From this, one can compute the plane aperture angle 2θ of the cross-section of a simple cone whose solid angle equals one steradian:

giving θ 0.572 rad or 32.77° and 2θ 1.144 rad or 65.54°.

The solid angle of a simple cone whose cross-section subtends the angle 2θ is:

A steradian is also equal to of a complete sphere (spat), to 3282.80635 square degrees, and to the spherical area of a polygon having an angle excess of 1 radian.[clarification needed]

SI multiples

[edit]

Millisteradians (msr) and microsteradians (μsr) are occasionally used to describe light and particle beams.[4][5] Other multiples are rarely used.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Stutzman, Warren L; Thiele, Gary A (2012-05-22). Antenna Theory and Design. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-57664-9.
  2. ^ Woolard, Edgar (2012-12-02). Spherical Astronomy. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-323-14912-9.
  3. ^ "Steradian", McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, fifth edition, Sybil P. Parker, editor in chief. McGraw-Hill, 1997. ISBN 0-07-052433-5.
  4. ^ Stephen M. Shafroth, James Christopher Austin, Accelerator-based Atomic Physics: Techniques and Applications, 1997, ISBN 1563964848, p. 333
  5. ^ R. Bracewell, Govind Swarup, "The Stanford microwave spectroheliograph antenna, a microsteradian pencil beam interferometer" IRE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 9:1:22-30 (1961)
[edit]
  • Media related to Steradian at Wikimedia Commons