In mathematics, the Gudermannian function relates a hyperbolic angle measure
to a circular angle measure
called the gudermannian of
and denoted
. The Gudermannian function reveals a close relationship between the circular functions and hyperbolic functions. It was introduced in the 1760s by Johann Heinrich Lambert, and later named for Christoph Gudermann who also described the relationship between circular and hyperbolic functions in 1830. The gudermannian is sometimes called the hyperbolic amplitude as a limiting case of the Jacobi elliptic amplitude
when parameter 
The real Gudermannian function is typically defined for
to be the integral of the hyperbolic secant

The real inverse Gudermannian function can be defined for
as the integral of the (circular) secant

The hyperbolic angle measure
is called the anti-gudermannian of
or sometimes the lambertian of
, denoted
In the context of geodesy and navigation for latitude
,
(scaled by arbitrary constant
) was historically called the meridional part of
(French: latitude croissante). It is the vertical coordinate of the Mercator projection.
The two angle measures
and
are related by a common stereographic projection

and this identity can serve as an alternative definition for
and
valid throughout the complex plane:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\operatorname {gd} \psi &={2\arctan }{\bigl (}\tanh {\tfrac {1}{2}}\psi \,{\bigr )},\\[5mu]\operatorname {gd} ^{-1}\phi &={2\operatorname {artanh} }{\bigl (}\tan {\tfrac {1}{2}}\phi \,{\bigr )}.\end{aligned}}}](./6dd27bd5d8e880b8a5a6bdeff8d4a27df40264c0.svg)