“Spherical harmonics” and “knowledge graphs” come from two very different areas, so the phrase can sound confusing. The key is that spherical harmonics are a mathematical tool, and in knowledge graphs they’re sometimes used as a way to represent or learn structure.
1. What spherical harmonics are
In math and physics, Spherical Harmonics are a set of functions defined on the surface of a sphere. They’re similar to sine/cosine waves but wrapped around a sphere instead of a line.
They’re widely used in:
Quantum Mechanics (electron orbitals)
Computer Graphics (lighting, reflections)
Signal processing on spherical surfaces
They let you describe complex shapes or patterns on a sphere as a combination of simpler components.
2. What a knowledge graph is
A Knowledge Graph is a network of entities (nodes) and relationships (edges), like:
(Paris) → (capital of) → (France)
(Einstein) → (developed) → (relativity)
These graphs are used in search engines, recommendation systems, and AI.
3. Where spherical harmonics come into knowledge graphs
They don’t belong to knowledge graphs by default, but appear in advanced machine learning methods, especially:
a) Geometric / embedding approaches
Modern knowledge graph models often map entities and relations into continuous spaces (vectors, manifolds).
Some newer approaches use:
Spherical spaces instead of flat (Euclidean) ones
Functions like spherical harmonics to represent directional or rotational patterns
Why?
Real-world relationships can have symmetry, hierarchy, or cyclic structure
Spherical representations can capture these better than plain vectors
b) Graph neural networks (GNNs)
In certain Geometric Deep Learning methods:
Graph data is treated with geometric tools
If the graph has spatial or rotational properties, spherical harmonics can be used for:
Encoding node positions
Learning rotationally invariant features
c) Rotational or angular embeddings
Some knowledge graph embedding models try to represent relationships as:
Rotations
Angles
Transformations on manifolds
Spherical harmonics can help model these transformations smoothly.
4. Intuition (simple analogy)
Think of a knowledge graph like a map of relationships.
Traditional embeddings = placing everything on a flat sheet
Spherical methods = placing everything on a globe
Spherical harmonics = a way to describe patterns on that globe efficiently.
5. Bottom line
Spherical harmonics are not a core concept of knowledge graphs, but they are used in advanced representation learning techniques to:
Model complex relational patterns
Capture symmetry and geometry
Improve embeddings in non-Euclidean spaces
If you want, I can show a concrete example (with equations or code) of how spherical harmonics are used in a graph embedding model.