VECTOR CALCULUS
10.10 General curvilinear coordinates
As indicated earlier, the contents of this section are more formal and technically
complicated than hitherto. The section could be omitted until the reader has had
some experience of using its results.
Cylindrical and spherical polars are just two examples of what are called
general curvilinear coordinates. In the general case, the position of a pointP
having Cartesian coordinatesx, y, zmay be expressed in terms of the three
curvilinear coordinatesu 1 ,u 2 ,u 3 ,where
x=x(u 1 ,u 2 ,u 3 ),y=y(u 1 ,u 2 ,u 3 ),z=z(u 1 ,u 2 ,u 3 ),
and similarly
u 1 =u 1 (x, y, z),u 2 =u 2 (x, y, z),u 3 =u 3 (x, y, z).
We assume that all these functions are continuous, differentiable and have a
single-valued inverse, except perhaps at or on certain isolated points or lines,
so that there is a one-to-one correspondence between thex, y, zandu 1 ,u 2 ,u 3
systems. Theu 1 -,u 2 -andu 3 - coordinate curves of a general curvilinear system
are analogous to thex-,y-andz- axes of Cartesian coordinates. The surfaces
u 1 =c 1 ,u 2 =c 2 andu 3 =c 3 ,wherec 1 ,c 2 ,c 3 are constants, are called the
coordinate surfacesand each pair of these surfaces has its intersection in a curve
called acoordinate curveorline(see figure 10.11).
If at each point in space the three coordinate surfaces passing through the point
meet at right angles then the curvilinear coordinate system is calledorthogonal.
For example, in spherical polarsu 1 =r,u 2 =θ,u 3 =φand the three coordinate
surfaces passing through the point (R,Θ,Φ) are the spherer=R, the circular
coneθ= Θ and the planeφ= Φ, which intersect at right angles at that
point. Therefore spherical polars form an orthogonal coordinate system (as do
cylindrical polars).
Ifr(u 1 ,u 2 ,u 3 ) is the position vector of the pointPthene 1 =∂r/∂u 1 is a vector
tangent to theu 1 -curve atP(for whichu 2 andu 3 are constants) in the direction
of increasingu 1. Similarly,e 2 =∂r/∂u 2 ande 3 =∂r/∂u 3 are vectors tangent to
theu 2 -andu 3 - curves atPin the direction of increasingu 2 andu 3 respectively.
Denoting the lengths of these vectors byh 1 ,h 2 andh 3 ,theunitvectors in each of
these directions are given by
eˆ 1 =
1
h 1
∂r
∂u 1
, ˆe 2 =
1
h 2
∂r
∂u 2
, ˆe 3 =
1
h 3
∂r
∂u 3
,
whereh 1 =|∂r/∂u 1 |,h 2 =|∂r/∂u 2 |andh 3 =|∂r/∂u 3 |.
The quantitiesh 1 ,h 2 ,h 3 are the scale factors of the curvilinear coordinate
system. The element of distance associated with an infinitesimal changeduiin
one of the coordinates ishidui. In the previous section we found that the scale