Euler angle
English
    
    Etymology
    
Named after Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler (1707–1783).
Noun
    
Euler angle (plural Euler angles)
- (geometry) Any one of three angles which together describe the orientation of a rigid body with respect to a fixed three-dimensional coordinate system, according to a formalism introduced by Leonhard Euler.
- Euler angles can also represent the orientation of a mobile frame of reference in physics or the orientation of a basis in 3-dimensional linear algebra.
 
- 2006, Don Koks, Explorations in Mathematical Physics: The Concepts Behind an Elegant Language, Springer, page 171:- We have not drawn a picture, since Euler angle pictures of three-dimensional rotations are notoriously difficult to comprehend; what is very useful is for the reader to make a set of wire axes with labels to help follow the sequence of rotations.
 
- 2008, Midori Kitagawa, Brian Windsor, MoCap for Artists: Workflow and Techniques for Motion Capture, Elsevier (Focal Press), page 188:- Why do we need to know what Euler angles are? Because we use them. Many commercial 3D computer animation packages that are available today use Euler angles to describe and change orientations of objects.
 
 
Translations
    
any one of three angles that describe orientation in a 3-d coordinate system
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See also
    
- Tait-Bryan angle
Further reading
    
 Orientation (geometry) on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Orientation (geometry) on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Euler–Rodrigues formula on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Euler–Rodrigues formula on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Euler angles on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Euler angles on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Rotation formalisms in three dimensions on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Rotation formalisms in three dimensions on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 Quaternion on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Quaternion on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Quaternions and spatial rotation on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Quaternions and spatial rotation on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 
 Rotation matrix on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia Rotation matrix on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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