Steradian
The steradian or square radian is the unit of solid angle in the International System of Units. It is used in three-dimensional geometry, and is analogous to the radian, which quantifies planar angles. A solid angle in the form of a circular cone can be projected onto a sphere from its centre, delineating a spherical cap where the cone intersects the sphere. The magnitude of the solid angle expressed in steradians is defined as the quotient of the surface area of the spherical cap and the square of the sphere's radius. This is analogous to the way a plane angle projected onto a circle delineates a circular arc on the circumference, whose length is proportional to the angle. Steradians can be used to measure a solid angle of any projected shape. The solid angle subtended is the same as that of a cone with the same projected area. A solid angle of one steradian subtends a cone aperture of approximately 1.144 radians or 65.54 degrees.
In the SI, solid angle is considered to be a dimensionless quantity, the ratio of the area projected onto a surrounding sphere and the square of the sphere's radius. This is the number of square radians in the solid angle. This means that the SI steradian is the number of square radians in a solid angle equal to one square radian, which of course is the number one. It is useful to distinguish between dimensionless quantities of a different kind, such as the radian, so the symbol sr is used. For example, radiant intensity can be measured in watts per steradian. 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.
The name steradian is derived from the Greek στερεός 'solid' + radian.
Definition
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, any portion of its surface with area subtends one steradian at its centre.A solid angle in the form of a circular cone is related to the area it cuts out of a sphere:
where
- is the solid angle
- is the surface area of the spherical cap,,
- is the radius of the sphere,
- is the height of the cap, and
- sr is the unit, steradian; sr = rad.
Other properties
The area of a spherical cap is, where is the "height" of the cap. If, then. From this, one can compute the cone aperture of the cross-section of a simple spherical cone whose solid angle equals one steradian:giving ≈ 0.572 rad 32.77° and aperture ≈ 1.144 rad 65.54°.
The solid angle of a spherical cone whose cross-section subtends the angle is:
A steradian is also equal to of a complete sphere, to ≈ 3282.80635 square degrees, and to the spherical area of a polygon having an angle excess of 1 radian.