Page:General Investigations of Curved Surfaces, by Carl Friedrich Gauss, translated into English by Adam Miller Hiltebeitel and James Caddall Morehead.djvu/17

 GENERAL INVESTIGATIONS

OF CURVED SURFACES

BY

KARL FRIEDRICH GAUSS

PRESENTED TO THE ROYAL SOCIETY, OCTOBER 8, 1827

1.

Investigations, in which the directions of various straight lines in space are to be considered, attain a high degree of clearness and simplicity if we employ, as an auxiliary, a sphere of unit radius described about an arbitrary centre, and suppose the different points of the sphere to represent the directions of straight lines parallel to the radii ending at these points. As the position of every point in space is determined by three coordinates, that is to say, the distances of the point from three mutually perpendicular fixed planes, it is necessary to consider, first of all, the directions of the axes perpendicular to these planes. The points on the sphere, which represent these directions, we shall denote by $(1),$  $(2),$  $(3).$ The distance of any one of these points from either of the other two will be a quadrant; and we shall suppose that the directions of the axes are those in which the corresponding coordinates increase.

2.

It will be advantageous to bring together here some propositions which are frequently used in questions of this kind.

I. The angle between two intersecting straight lines is measured by the arc between the points on the sphere which correspond to the directions of the lines.

II. The orientation of any plane whatever can be represented by the great circle on the sphere, the plane of which is parallel to the given plane.