Calculus of Variation - Shortest path on the surface of a sphere

AI Thread Summary
The discussion clarifies that the shortest path on the surface of a sphere, represented by the equation Ay-Bx=z, is a great circle formed by the intersection of a plane through the sphere's center and the spherical surface. This great circle can be visualized as a ring, with the shortest distance between two points on the sphere being the shorter arc of this circle. The participants confirm that the intersection of the plane with the sphere creates a circle, and the arc connecting the two points represents the shortest path. Additionally, the derivation of the great circle solution begins with angular coordinates on the sphere before relating it to the plane's equation. The explanation resolves the initial confusion regarding the representation of the solution.
cxcxcx0505
Messages
26
Reaction score
0
Refer to "2.jpg", it said that the shortest path on the surface of a sphere is Ay-Bx=z , which is a plane passing through the center of the sphere. I cannot really understand about this. Does it mean that the shortest path is a ring that connects two points with its center at the center of the sphere?
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    39.9 KB · Views: 707
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    57.1 KB · Views: 687
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
It actually says the geodesic is the intersection of a plane through the center with the spherical surface. This is a great circle, as it says.
 
Am I right to say that the intersection of a plane through the center of a sphere is a ring(circle), and the short arc of this ring(circle) which pass through the two points is the shortest path?
 
cxcxcx0505 said:
Am I right to say that the intersection of a plane through the center of a sphere is a ring(circle), and the short arc of this ring(circle) which pass through the two points is the shortest path?

The intersection of a plane through the center of a sphere with its surface, embedded in a higher dimensional space (as the reference you cite presents it), is a ring - a great circle. So yes, you are essentially right. Also, you are correct that the shorter arc is the shortest possible distance.
 
Thanks PAllen.
 
I have another question, why the solution comes out is an equation of a plane and not an equation of a ring(circle)?
 
cxcxcx0505 said:
I have another question, why the solution comes out is an equation of a plane and not an equation of a ring(circle)?

They first get the great circle solution purely in terms of two angular coordinates on the sphere's surface. Then they derive that it is the intersection of plane through the center with the sphere.
 
  • Like
Likes 1 person
Okie, I get it, many thanks for explaining.
 
Back
Top