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A spheroid is a quadric surface in three dimensions obtained by rotating an ellipse about one of its principal axes. Three particular cases of a spheroid are:
- If the ellipse is rotated about its major axis, the surface is a prolate spheroid (similar to the shape of a rugby ball).
Main article: prolate
Main article: oblate spheroid
- If the generating ellipse is a circle, the surface is a sphere (completely symmetric).
Main article: sphere
The protean blobs of wax in a lava lamp provides many approximate examples of the first two forms as well as many intermediate forms.
Alternatively, a spheroid can also be characterised as an ellipsoid having two equal equatorial semi-axes (i.e., ax = ay = a), as represented by the equation
-
Main article: ellipsoid
Surface area
Semi-major(a) and semi-minor(b) axis lengths
A prolate spheroid has surface area
-
An oblate spheroid has surface area
-
where
- is the semi-major axis length;
- is the semi-minor axis length;
- is the angular eccentricity of an ellipse (which is inherently oblate in shape):
-
-
- (sin(oε) is frequently expressed as the eccentricity, "e")
Volume
Prolate spheroid:
- volume is
Oblate spheroid:
- volume is
Curvature
If a spheroid is parameterized as
-
where is the reduced or parametric latitude, is the longitude, and
and , then its Gaussian curvature is
-
and its mean curvature is
-
Both of these curvatures are always positive, so that every point on a spheroid is elliptic.
See also
External links
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