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    Ellipsoid

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



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    Shaded wireframe rendering of an ellipsoid with a = 3, b = 2, c = 1 (scalene ellipsoid).
    Wireframe rendering of an ellipsoid (oblate spheroid)

    An ellipsoid is a type of quadric surface that is a higher dimensional analogue of an ellipse. The equation of a standard axis-aligned ellipsoid body in an xyz-Cartesian coordinate system is

    {x^2 \over    a^2}+{y^2 \over b^2}+{z^2 \over c^2}=1

    where a and b are the equatorial radii (along the x and y axes) and c is the polar radius (along the z-axis), all of which are fixed positive real numbers determining the shape of the ellipsoid.

    More generally, a not-necessarily-axis-aligned ellipsoid is defined by the equation

    \mathbf{x}^\mathrm{T} A^{-2} \mathbf{x} = 1

    where A is a symmetric positive definite matrix and x is a vector. In that case, the eigenvectors of A define the principal directions of the ellipsoid and the eigenvalues are the corresponding equatorial radii.

    If all three radii are equal, the solid body is a sphere; if two radii are equal, the ellipsoid is a spheroid:

    The points (a,0,0), (0,b,0) and (0,0,c) lie on the surface and the line segments from the origin to these points are called the semi-principal axes. These correspond to the semi-major axis and semi-minor axis of the appropriate ellipses.

    Scalene ellipsoids are frequently called "triaxial ellipsoids",[1] the implication being that all three axes need to be specified to define the shape.

    Contents

    [edit] Parameterization

    Using the common coordinates, where \beta\,\! is a point's reduced, or parametric latitude and {\color{white}+}\!\!\!\lambda{\color{white}'}\,\! is its planetographic longitude, an ellipsoid can be parameterized by:

    \begin{align}
x&=a\,\cos(\beta)\cos(\lambda);\!{\color{white}|}\\
y&=b\,\cos(\beta)\sin(\lambda);\\
z&=c\,\sin(\beta);\end{align}\,\!
    \begin{matrix}-90^\circ\leq\beta\leq+90^\circ;
\quad-180^\circ\leq\lambda\leq+180^\circ;\!{\color{white}\big|}\end{matrix}\,\!
    (Note that this parameterization is not
     1-1 at the poles, where \scriptstyle{{\color{white}|}\beta=\pm{90}^\circ}{\color{white}|}\,\!)

    Or, using spherical coordinates, where {\color{white}+}\!\!\!\phi{\color{white}'}\,\! is the colatitude, or zenith, and {\color{white}+}\!\!\!\theta{\color{white}\!\!\!-}\,\! is the longitude in 360°, or azimuth:

    \begin{align}
x&=a\,\cos(\theta)\sin(\phi);\!{\color{white}|}\\
y&=b\,\sin(\theta)\sin(\phi);\\
z&=c\,\cos(\phi);\end{align}\,\!
    \begin{matrix}0\leq\theta\leq{360}^\circ;
\quad{0}\leq\phi\leq{180}^\circ;\!{\color{white}\big|}\end{matrix}\,\!

    [edit] Volume

    The volume of an ellipsoid is given by the formula

    \frac{4}{3}\pi    abc.\,\!

    Note that this equation reduces to that of the volume of a sphere when all three elliptic radii are equal, and to that of an oblate or prolate spheroid when two of them are equal.

    [edit] Surface area

    The surface area of an ellipsoid is given by:

    2\pi\left(c^2+b\sqrt{a^2-c^2}E(o\!\varepsilon,m)+\frac{bc^2}{\sqrt{a^2-c^2}}F(o\!\varepsilon,m)\right),\,\!

    where

    o\!\varepsilon=\arccos\left(\frac{c}{a}\right)\;\textrm{(oblate)\;\;or\;\;}\arccos\left(\frac{a}{c}\right)\;(\textrm{prolate}),\,\!

    is the modular angle, or angular eccentricity; m=\frac{b^2-c^2}{b^2\sin(o\!\varepsilon)^2}\,\! and E(o\!\varepsilon,m)\,\!, F(o\!\varepsilon,m)\,\! are the incomplete elliptic integrals of the first and second kind.

    Unlike the surface area of a sphere, the surface area of a general ellipsoid cannot be expressed exactly by an elementary function.

    An approximate formula is:

    \approx 4\pi\!\left(\frac{    a^p b^p+a^p c^p+b^p c^p }{3}\right)^{1/p}.\,\!

    Where p ≈ 1.6075 yields a relative error of at most 1.061% (Knud Thomsen's formula); a value of p = 8/5 = 1.6 is optimal for nearly spherical ellipsoids, with a relative error of at most 1.178% (David W. Cantrell's formula).

    Exact formulae can be obtained for the case a = b (i.e., a spherical equator):

     If oblate: 2\pi\!\left(a^2+c^2\frac{\operatorname{arctanh}(\sin(o\!\varepsilon))}{\sin(o\!\varepsilon)}\right);\,\!
    If prolate: 2\pi\!\left(a^2+c^2\frac{o\!\varepsilon}{\tan(o\!\varepsilon)}\right);\,\!

    In the "flat" limit of c \ll    a, b\,\!, the area is approximately 2\pi    ab.\,\!

    [edit] Mass properties

    The mass of an ellipsoid of uniform density is:

    m = \rho V = \rho \frac{4}{3} \pi    abc\,\!

    where \rho\,\! is the density.

    The mass moments of inertia of an ellipsoid of uniform density are:

    I_{\mathrm{xx}} = m {b^2+c^2 \over 5}
    I_{\mathrm{yy}} = m {c^2+a^2 \over 5}
    I_{\mathrm{zz}} = m {a^2+b^2 \over 5}

    where I_{\mathrm{xx}}\,\!, I_{\mathrm{yy}}\,\!, and I_{\mathrm{zz}}\,\! are the moments of inertia about the x, y, and z axes, respectively. Products of inertia are zero.

    It can easily be shown that if a=b=c, then the moments of inertia reduce to those for a uniform-density sphere.

    Conversely, if the mass and principle inertias of an arbitrary rigid body are known, an equivalent ellipsoid of uniform density can be constructed, with the following characteristics:

    a = \sqrt{{5 \over 2} {I_{\mathrm{yy}}+I_{\mathrm{zz}}-I_{\mathrm{xx}} \over m}}
    b = \sqrt{{5 \over 2} {I_{\mathrm{zz}}+I_{\mathrm{xx}}-I_{\mathrm{yy}} \over m}}
    c = \sqrt{{5 \over 2} {I_{\mathrm{xx}}+I_{\mathrm{yy}}-I_{\mathrm{zz}} \over m}}
    \rho =  \frac{3}{4} {m \over \pi    abc}.\!

    [edit] Rotational equilibrium

    Artist's conception of Haumea, a scalene dwarf planet, with its two moons

    Scalene ellipsoids and cuboids rotate stably along their major or minor axes, but not along their median axis. This can be seen experimentally by throwing an eraser with some spin. In addition, moment of inertia considerations mean that rotation along the major axis is more easily perturbed than rotation along the minor axis. One practical effect of this is that scalene astronomical bodies such as Haumea generally rotate along their minor axes (as does the Earth, which is merely oblate); in addition, because of tidal locking, scalene moons in synchronous orbit such as those of Saturn orbit with their major axis aligned radially to their planet.

    A relaxed ellipsoid, that is, one in hydrostatic equilibrium, has an oblateness a − c directly proportional to its mean density and mean radius. Ellipsoids with a differentiated interior—that is, a denser core than mantle—have a lower oblateness than a homogeneous body. Over all, the ratio (b–c)/(a−c) is approximately 0.25, though this drops for rapidly rotating bodies.[2]

    [edit] Linear transformations

    If one applies an invertible linear transformation to a sphere, one obtains an ellipsoid; it can be brought into the above standard form by a suitable rotation, a consequence of the spectral theorem. If the linear transformation is represented by a symmetric 3-by-3 matrix, then the eigenvectors of the matrix are orthogonal (due to the spectral theorem) and represent the directions of the axes of the ellipsoid: the lengths of the semiaxes are given by the eigenvalues.

    The intersection of an ellipsoid with a plane is either empty, a single point, or an ellipse (including a circle).

    One can also define ellipsoids in higher dimensions, as the images of spheres under invertible linear transformations. The spectral theorem can again be used to obtain a standard equation akin to the one given above.

    [edit] Egg shape

    Oval

    The shape of a chicken egg is approximately that of half each a prolate and roughly spherical (potentially even minorly oblate) ellipsoid joined at the equator, sharing a principal axis of rotational symmetry.[3] Although the term egg-shaped usually implies a lack of reflection symmetry across the equatorial plane, it may also refer to true prolate ellipsoids. It can also be used to describe the 2D figure that, revolved around its major axis, produces the 3D surface. See also oval (geometry).

    [edit] See also

    [edit] References

    1. ^ OED, "triaxial": Helmert infers ... that the earth is a triaxial ellipsoid.
    2. ^ "Shapes of the Saturnian Icy Satellites".
    3. ^ Egg Curves by Jürgen Köller.

    [edit] External links

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