Cylindrical coordinate system
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The cylindrical coordinate system is a three-dimensional system which essentially extends circular polar coordinates by adding a third coordinate (usually denoted <math>h</math>) which measures the height of a point above the plane.
A point P is given as <math>(r, \theta, h)</math>. In terms of the Cartesian coordinate system:
Cylindrical coordinates are useful in analyzing surfaces that are symmetrical about an axis, with the z-axis chosen as the axis of symmetry. For example, the infinitely long circular cylinder that has the Cartesian equation x2 + y2 = c2 has the very simple equation r = c in cylindrical coordinates. Hence the name "cylindrical" coordinates.
Some mathematicians indeed use <math>(r, \theta, z)</math>.
Conversion from cylindrical to Cartesian coordinates
Conversion from Cartesian to cylindrical coordinates