Solid angle: Difference between revisions

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A '''solid angle''' is a three dimensional analogue of angle formed by three or more planes intersecting at a common point and measured in [[Steradian|steradians]].
A '''solid angle''' is a three-dimensional generalization of two-dimensional angles.
Simple examples are formed by three or more planes intersecting at a common point.
The unit of measure is the [[steradian]] (sr), an analogue of the [[radian]] (rad) measure for planar angles.
In mathematics, real numbers (without any unit) are used for solid angles because the steradian is dimensionless.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

Latest revision as of 06:00, 20 October 2024

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A solid angle is a three-dimensional generalization of two-dimensional angles. Simple examples are formed by three or more planes intersecting at a common point. The unit of measure is the steradian (sr), an analogue of the radian (rad) measure for planar angles. In mathematics, real numbers (without any unit) are used for solid angles because the steradian is dimensionless.