Coordinate systems
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% This function converts cartesian coördinates X, Y, Z to double polar coördinates (r, elevation, azimuth) % Double polar coördinates is a non-standard coördinate system used for audiological purposes only. % % The algorith uses the inverse of: dotproduct(V1,V2) = % |V1|*|V2|*cos(angle) to determine the angle. % To calculate the angle with a plane the dotproduct with the normal of the plane is calculated first. % The angle with the plane is pi/2 - angle with normal. % One also needs to take the quadrant into consideration. % X is left (-) to right (+) % Y is back (-) to front (+) % Z is bottom (-) to top (+) % Middle of the sphere is (0, 0, 0) % azimuth is angle (in rad) with YZ plane with Y-hat is zero and X-hat is % pi/2. % elevation is angle (in rad) with XY plane with Y-hat is zero Z-hat is % pi/2. function [azimuth, elevation, r] = cart2double_polar(X, Y, Z) r = sqrt(X^2+Y^2+Z^2); %azimuth: projection to XY plane, angle with Y_hat az_angleWithY_hat = getAngle([X,Y,0],[0,1,0]); %elevation: projection to YZ plane, angle with Y_hat el_angleWithY_hat = getAngle([0,Y,Z],[0,1,0]); % azimuth from -pi to +pi switch findQuadrant(X, Y) % Quadrants are numbered anti-clockwise case {1,4} azimuth = az_angleWithY_hat; case {2, 3} azimuth = - az_angleWithY_hat; case 0 % (X=0 or Y=0) azimuth = 0; end % elevation from -pi/2 to +pi/2 switch findQuadrant(Y, Z) case 1 elevation = el_angleWithY_hat; case 2 elevation = pi - el_angleWithY_hat; case 3 elevation = el_angleWithY_hat - pi; case 4 elevation = - el_angleWithY_hat; case 0 % (Y=0 or Z=0) elevation = 0; end