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I want to find out the distance between the centers of $2$ circles. Say, circle $1$ $(\theta,\phi)$ circle $2$ $(\theta,\phi)$

The radius of this circle is found using $d\tan(\theta)$ where $d$ is the range (different from radius)

$cd=\sqrt{(x_1-x_2)^2 + (y_1-y_2)^2 + (z_1-z_2)^2}$ is the formula I'm going to use to find out the distance between the $2$ points.

But can anyone help me in defining $x$, $y$ and $z$?

I know to convert it to Cartesian coordinates if say the points are $(r,\theta)$ where $r$ is the radius [$2$ dimensional]

$cd$ is a euclidean distance between the centre of circle#1 (formed due to angles $az(t,n),el(t,n)$ in space from transmitter $t$, at trial $n$ and distance $d$ away from origin) and circle#2 (formed due to angles $az(r,n),el(r,n)$ in space from receiver $r$, at trial $n$ and distance $d$ away from origin)

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    Consider 2 cones formed in space. the end of the cone, (say is a circle (that is it projects a circular pattern - base of the cone) and the center of this circle is defined by angles. there is another cone being projected whose centers are defined by angles. now how do i find out the distance between the 2 center points?2012-12-10

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In spherical coordinates, and generally in $\mathbb R^3$, it takes three coordinates to specify a point. If you only have $\phi, \theta$ you have a ray from the origin. You need the distance from the origin to get a point. Then, given $(r,\theta,\phi)$ for each point you can convert to Cartesian coordinates with $x=r \sin \theta \cos \phi, y=\sin \theta \sin \phi, z=r \cos \theta$

Added, based on your comment: The easiest is to erect a coordinate system at each transmitter. From transmitter 1, you know the point is at $(r_1,\theta_1,\phi_1)$, which you can convert to $(x_1,y_1,z_1)$. Then from transmitter 2, you know the vector is $(r'_2,\theta'_2,\phi'_2)$ where the primes indicate that the coordinate system is centered on transmitter 2. Hopefully your axes are aligned, that makes it easier. Convert this to $(x'_2,y'_2,z'_2)$, still referenced to transmitter 2. Then if transmitter 2 is at $(t2_x,t2_y,t2_z)$ in the transmitter 1 frame, the second point is at $(x'2+t2_x,y'_2+t2_y,z'_2+t2_z)$. Now you can use the usual Cartesian distance function.

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    No I have tried this but the problem is will r be the radius or the range. I have 2 different parameters. I'll try to attach a figure2012-12-10