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Oblate spheroid
  Computes partial volume and area for an oblate spheroid.
2024.May.17 13:17:08
a m Equatorial radius (meter) (e.g., SI units).
c m   (c < a)† Polar radius (meter). •
H m Height (meter). •
n Number of integration steps (in H). •
Show values ? Shows the values of the graph coordinates.
  Computes the volume, V, and area, A, of an oblate spheroid (with vertical axis of symmetry) with "equatorial radius" a (in the horizontal plane) and "polar radius" c (vertical), c ≤ a. The calculation is from its "bottom pole", z = 0, to a given height, z = H (so 0 ≤ H ≤ 2 c).
 A spheroid is an ellipsoid of revolution; and oblate if flattened, i.e., c ≤ a (a sphere if equal).
 As 0→ca, it is 2πa²→A→4πa² (the latter, say, As being the area of a sphere, when c = a).
 † If ca, the final, analytical area cannot be calculated.
 Curves are drawn for V(z) and A* = A(z)⁄As (thus not exceeding 1), z ∈ (0, 2c), with z the distance from the bottom pole.
 Other suggested data: a = 6 (for eccentricity); a, c, h = 3.31, 2.2, 2.2 (for V ≅ 50).
References: Plate: ObSpheroid

• Weisstein, Eric W. "Solid of revolution". From MathWorld—a Wolfram web resource.   vol ← a √[1 − (zc)²]

• Weisstein, Eric W. ("Ellipsoid of revolution"). From MathWorld—a Wolfram web resource.   area ← a √(1 + Ecc²z²)

• Wood, Alan, "Alan Wood's Unicode Resources".

• 1881-10-11: Richardson, Lewis Fry (1953-09-30).

 
 
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Created: 2009-10-11 — Last modified: 2010-09-30