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rotating

Rotating refers to the motion of an object or reference frame around an axis or central point in which the distances to the axis remain unchanged. Rotation is distinguished from translation, where every point moves the same distance in a parallel direction.

In two dimensions, a rotation is a transformation about a fixed point by a certain angle, preserving

In three dimensions, a rotation changes orientation without changing position, and it can be described by an

Rotations can be described in active or passive terms. An active rotation moves the object itself, whereas

Common quantities associated with rotation include angular velocity (how fast the orientation changes) and angular momentum

Rotating underpins many phenomena and technologies, from the spinning of celestial bodies and gyroscopes to computer

the
size
and
shape
of
figures.
The
angle
is
measured
in
degrees
or
radians,
with
positive
values
indicating
counterclockwise
rotation
and
negative
values
indicating
clockwise
rotation.
The
set
of
all
2D
rotations
forms
the
group
SO(2).
axis
and
an
angle,
or
represented
by
a
rotation
matrix,
Euler
angles,
unit
quaternions,
or
an
axis–angle
pair.
Unlike
2D
rotations,
3D
rotations
generally
do
not
commute;
the
order
of
successive
rotations
affects
the
final
orientation.
The
mathematical
structure
for
3D
rotations
is
the
special
orthogonal
group
SO(3).
a
passive
rotation
changes
the
observer’s
reference
frame.
These
viewpoints
are
related
by
a
change
of
coordinates
and
can
yield
different
descriptions
of
the
same
physical
situation.
(an
object’s
rotational
motion
tendency).
Units
include
radians
per
second
for
velocity
and
radians
for
angle,
with
radians
being
a
dimensionless
measure.
graphics,
robotics,
and
navigation
systems.
Its
properties
of
symmetry
and
invariance
make
it
central
to
physics,
engineering,
and
mathematics.