ozone said:
Ok your right i screwed up the circle equation it should be 4y^2 + x^2.
No that's still not right - I got
x^2 + y^2 = \frac{1}{4}(u^2 + v^2)^2.
See if you agree.
So it is true that circles in the x-y plane are mapped onto circles in the u-v plane - but see the hint below.
I am still trying to figure out how to calculate the area and circumference for a circle in this coordinate system though. I'm not arguing that the circumference isn't changed, but how would you show that?
Ok I worked the problem myself and it's actually quite cute.
To find the radius and circumference, just work in the (u,v) coordinates using your line element - which amounts to multiplying the usual lengths by R, with
R^2 = u^2 + v^2.
You'll have to do a little integral to get the radius, and you can just use c = 2 pi R to get the circumference - but (hint) watch out for a subtle factor of 2.
The whole thing has a nice interpretation as a conformal map - if you know a bit of complex analysis - I don't know if that's the point of view from which you're approaching this.
after all spherical coordinates are just a coordinate transformation where your mapping
x = \rho cos\phi sin\theta , y = \rho sin\phi sin\theta , z = r cos\theta
I don't see how that is so much different from what is being performed here. And i already demonstrated that the area of a circle on the 2-d surface of a sphere isn't equal to the area of a circle on a plane.
Yeah I think this turned out to be a bit of a red herring.
As you rightly point out, there are two different areas here - the area of the (flat) disc bounded by the circle and the area of the bit of the 2-sphere bounded by the circle. But note that they're different areas because they're different surfaces, not because of any choice of coordinate system. You can work out either area in the coordinate system of your choice.