About the Ellipsoid
What Is an Ellipsoid?
An ellipsoid is a three-dimensional surface obtained by deforming a sphere. It has three mutually perpendicular axes of different lengths (a, b, c). When all three are equal, it is a sphere. When two are equal, it is a spheroid (oblate or prolate).
Volume
The volume of an ellipsoid is V = (4/3) x pi x a x b x c. This generalizes the sphere volume formula V = (4/3)pir³ by replacing r³ with the product abc.
Surface Area
Unlike volume, the exact surface area of a general ellipsoid involves complex elliptic integrals with no simple closed form. The Knud Thomsen approximation provides excellent accuracy: S = 4pi x ((ab)^1.6075 + (ac)^1.6075 + (bc)^1.6075)/3)^(1/1.6075), accurate to within 1.061%.
Applications
Ellipsoids model planetary shapes (Earth is an oblate spheroid), atomic orbitals, stress distributions in materials, and ellipsoidal reflectors in optics. They are fundamental in geodesy, physics, and engineering.