Information about Dihedral Angle

In aerospace engineering, the dihedral is the angle between the two wings; see dihedral.


In geometry, the angle between two planes is called their dihedral or torsion angle.

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Figure 1: Dihedral angle of three vectors, defined as an exterior spherical angle. The longer and shorter black segments are arcs of the great circles passing through math:F/3386AEB429C997713744DFC5.gif and math:F/3386AEB429C99771323F7649.gif and through math:F/3386AEB429C99771323F7649.gif and math:F/3386AEB429C9977116ACC579.gif, respectively.
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Figure 2: Dihedral angle defined by three bond vectors (shown in red, green and blue) connecting four atoms.
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Figure 3: Dihedral angle defined by three bond vectors (shown in red, green and blue) connecting four atoms. From this perspective, the second bond vector (green) is coming out of the page.


The dihedral angle of two planes can be seen by looking at the planes "edge on", i.e., along their line of intersection. The dihedral angle between two planes denoted A and B is the angle between their two normal unit vectors and



A dihedral angle can be signed; for example, the dihedral angle can be defined as the angle through which plane A must be rotated (about their common line of intersection) to align it with plane B. Thus, . For precision, one should specify the angle or its supplement, since both rotations will cause the planes to coincide.

Alternative definitions

Since a plane can be defined in several ways (e.g., by vectors or points in them, or by their normal vectors), there are several equivalent definitions of a dihedral angle.

Any plane can be defined by two non-collinear vectors lying in that plane; taking their cross product and normalizing yields the normal vector to the plane. Thus, a dihedral angle can be defined by four, pairwise non-collinear vectors.

We may also define the dihedral angle of three non-collinear vectors , and (shown in red, green and blue, respectively, in Figure 1). The vectors and define the first plane, whereas and define the second plane. The dihedral angle corresponds to an exterior spherical angle (Figure 1), which is a well-defined, signed quantity.



where the two-argument atan2 takes care of the sign.

Dihedral angles in polyhedra

Every polyhedron, regular and irregular, convex and concave, has a dihedral angle at every edge.

A dihedral angle (also called the face angle) is the internal angle at which two adjacent faces meet. An angle of zero degrees means the face normal vectors are antiparallel and the faces overlap each other (Implying part of a degenerate polyhedron). An angle of 180 degrees means the faces are parallel (like a tiling). An angle greater than 180 exists on concave portions of a polyhedron.

Every dihedral angle in an edge-transitive polyhedron has the same value. This includes the 5 Platonic solids, the 4 Kepler-Poinsot solids, the two quasiregular solids, and two quasiregular dual solids.

See Table of polyhedron dihedral angles.

Dihedral angles of four atoms

To a good approximation, the bond lengths and bond angles of most molecules do not change between synthesis and degradation. Hence, the structure of a molecule can be defined with high precision by the dihedral angles between three successive chemical bond vectors (Figure 2). The dihedral angle varies only the distance between the first and fourth atoms; the other interatomic distances are constrained by the chemical bond lengths and bond angles.

To visualize the dihedral angle of four atoms, it's helpful to look down the second bond vector (Figure 3). The first atom is at 6 o'clock, the fourth atom is at roughly 2 o'clock and the second and third atoms are located in the center. The second bond vector is coming out of the page. The dihedral angle is the counterclockwise angle made by the vectors (red) and (blue). When the fourth atom eclipses the first atom, the dihedral angle is zero; when the atoms are exactly opposite (as in Figure 2), the dihedral angle is 180°.

Dihedral angles of biological molecules

The backbone dihedral angles of proteins are called φ (involving the backbone atoms C'-N-Cα-C'), ψ (involving the backbone atoms N-Cα-C'-N) and ω (involving the backbone atoms Cα-C'-N-Cα). Thus, φ controls the C'-C' distance, ψ controls the N-N distance and ω controls the Cα-Cα distance.

The planarity of the peptide bond usually restricts to be 180° (the typical trans case) or 0° (the rare cis case). The distance between the Cα atoms in the trans and cis isomers is approximately 3.8 and 2.9 Å, respectively. The cis isomer is mainly observed in Xaa-Pro peptide bonds (where Xaa is any amino acid).

The sidechain dihedral angles of proteins are denoted as χ15, depending on the distance up the sidechain. The χ1 dihedral angle is defined by atoms N-Cα-Cβ-Cγ, the χ2 dihedral angle is defined by atoms Cα-Cβ-Cγ-Cδ, and so on.

The sidechain dihedral angles tend to cluster near 180°, 60°, and -60°, which are called the trans, gauche+, and gauche- conformations. The choice of sidechain dihedral angles is affected by the neighbouring backbone and sidechain dihedrals; for example, the gauche+ conformation is rarely followed by the gauche+ conformation (and vice versa) because of the increased likelihood of atomic collisions.

Dihedral angles have also been defined by the IUPAC for other molecules, such as the nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) and for polysaccharides.

See also

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Aerospace engineering is the branch of engineering that concerns aircraft, spacecraft, and related topics. Aerospace Engineering was originally known as aeronautical engineering and dealt solely with aircraft.
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Dihedral is the upward angle from horizontal in a fixed-wing aircraft or bird wing from root to tip, as viewed from directly in front or behind the aircraft. The aeorodynamic stabilising qualities of the dihedral were first described by Sir George Cayley in 1808/09.
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angle (in full, plane angle) is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex of the angle. The magnitude of the angle is the "amount of rotation" that separates the two rays, and can be measured by considering the length of circular arc swept
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Dihedral is the upward angle from horizontal in a fixed-wing aircraft or bird wing from root to tip, as viewed from directly in front or behind the aircraft. The aeorodynamic stabilising qualities of the dihedral were first described by Sir George Cayley in 1808/09.
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Geometry (Greek γεωμετρία; geo = earth, metria = measure) is a part of mathematics concerned with questions of size, shape, and relative position of figures and with properties of space. Geometry is one of the oldest sciences.
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angle (in full, plane angle) is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex of the angle. The magnitude of the angle is the "amount of rotation" that separates the two rays, and can be measured by considering the length of circular arc swept
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plane is a two-dimensional manifold or surface that is perfectly flat. Informally it can be thought of as an infinitely vast and infinitesimally thin sheet oriented in some space.
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  • In mathematics, the term torsion usually has one of two unrelated meanings. The first is geometrical, measuring curvature of some sort. The second is algebraic, relating to the set of elements that vanish (e.g., elements of finite order).

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Intersection has various meanings in different contexts:
  • In mathematics and geometry
  • Intersection (set theory), the set of elements common to some collection of sets.

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surface normal, or simply normal, to a flat surface is a vector which is perpendicular to that surface. A normal to a non-flat surface at a point P on the surface is a vector perpendicular to the tangent plane to that surface at P.
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A negative number is a number that is less than zero, such as −3. A positive number is a number that is greater than zero, such as 3. Zero itself is neither positive nor negative.
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A rotation is a movement of an object in a circular motion.
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Precision has the following meanings:
  1. In engineering, science, industry, and statistics, precision characterises the degree of mutual agreement among a series of individual measurements, values, or results — see accuracy and precision.

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A pair of angles is supplementary if their measurements add up to 180 degrees.

If the two supplementary angles are adjacent (i.e. have a common vertex and share a side, but do not have any interior points in common) their non-shared sides form a straight line.
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cross product is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional Euclidean space that results in another vector which is perpendicular to the two input vectors. By contrast, the dot product produces a scalar result.
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A spherical angle is a particular dihedral angle; it is the angle between two intersecting arcs on a sphere, and is measured by the angle between the planes containing the arcs and the centre of the sphere.
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atan2 is a two-argument function that computes the arctangent of given y and x, but with a range of . It was introduced first in many computer programming languages but is now common in all fields of science and engineering too.
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polyhedron (plural polyhedra or polyhedrons) is a geometric object with flat faces and straight edges.

The word polyhedron comes from the Classical Greek πολυεδρον, from poly-
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Something that is irregular does not follow the expected pattern. The term is used in many different fields, with quite different meanings.
  • In astronomy, an astronomical object whose shape or behavior varies considerably from the archetype is called an irregular.

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The word convex means curving out or bulging outward.

Convex or convexity may refer to:

Mathematics:
  • Convex set, a set of points containing all line segments between each pair of its points

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The word concave means curving in or hollowed inward. The term is most commonly used to refer to:
  • Concave lens, a lens with inward-curving (concave) surfaces.
  • Concave polygon, a polygon which is not convex.

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The term antiparallel may refer to:
  • Antiparallel (biochemistry), the orientation of adjacent molecules
  • Antiparallel (mathematics), the placement of parallel lines in relation to an angle
  • Antiparallel (electronics), the polarity of devices run in parallel

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isotoxal or edge-transitive if its symmetries act transitively on its edges. Informally, this means that there is only one type of edge to the object: given two edges, there is a translation, rotation and/or reflection that will move one edge to the other, while leaving the
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In geometry, a Platonic solid is a convex regular polyhedron. These are the three-dimensional analogs of the convex regular polygons. There are precisely five such figures (shown below). They are unique in that the faces, edges and angles are all congruent.
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Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra is a popular name for the regular star polyhedra. Each has faces which are congruent regular convex polygons or star polygons and has the same number of faces meeting at each vertex (compare to Platonic solids).
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The dihedral angles for the edge-transitive polyhedra are:

Picture Name Schläfli
symbol Vertex/Face
configuration exact dihedral angle
(radians) approximate
dihedral angle
(degrees) Dehn invariant
Platonic solids (regular convex)
Tetrahedron (3)3
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Proteins are large organic compounds made of amino acids arranged in a linear chain and joined together by peptide bonds between the carboxyl and amino groups of adjacent amino acid residues.
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A peptide bond is a chemical bond that is formed between two molecules when the carboxyl group of one molecule reacts with the amino group of the other molecule, releasing a molecule of water (H2O).
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Trans is a Latin noun or prefix, meaning "across", "beyond" or "on the opposite side [of]" . It is the opposite of cis, which means "on the same side [of]".

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