What Is a Lune on a Sphere and Its Key Properties?

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A Lune on a sphere is defined as a diangle formed by two opposite points, with equal angles and sides that each represent half a circumference. The area of a Lune can be calculated using the formula 2r²θ, while the total surface area of a sphere is 4πr². Spherical triangles generate six Lunes, covering the surface once and the triangle twice more, leading to the conclusion that the area of a spherical triangle is πr²E, where E is the excess of the angle sum over π. Notably, the sum of angles in a spherical triangle always exceeds π, differing from plane triangles. The term "Lune" derives from Latin, reflecting the moon's sunlit region, and the concept extends to higher dimensions.
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Definition/Summary

A Lune is a diangle on the surface of a sphere whose two vertices are opposite points.

So the two angles of a Lune are equal, and each of the two sides is half a circumference.

The whole surface is a Lune of angle 2\pi.

Equations

Area of a Lune: 2 r^2 \theta

Area of the whole surface: 4\pi r^2

Any spherical triangle whose sides are arcs of great circles generates six Lunes, which cover the whole surface once and the triangle and its opposite twice more.

From that, it is easy to prove that the area of a spherical triangle is: \pi r^2 E
where E is the sum of the angles minus \pi.

In particular, E > 0, and so the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle always exceeds \pi (unlike a plane triangle, where it always equals \pi).

Extended explanation

The word "Lune" comes from the Latin for "moon", and from the fact that the visible sunlit region of the moon is a Lune. :smile:

The projection onto a plane of a Lune of angle less than a right-angle (\frac{\pi}{2}) is a crescent.

The formula for the area of a spherical triangle can also be proved by showing directly that E for any triangle is the sum of the Es for any two triangles into which it is divided.

* This entry is from our old Library feature. If you know who wrote it, please let us know so we can attribute a writer. Thanks!
 
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The visibly lighted portion of the Moon visible from the Earth is a spherical lune. The concept translates to any dimensions, the two dimensional lunes of Hippocrates, or n-sphere lunes.
 
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