Spherical cap

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An example of a spherical cap in blue (and another in red) Spherical cap diagram.tiff
An example of a spherical cap in blue (and another in red)

In geometry, a spherical cap or spherical dome is a portion of a sphere or of a ball cut off by a plane. It is also a spherical segment of one base, i.e., bounded by a single plane. If the plane passes through the center of the sphere (forming a great circle), so that the height of the cap is equal to the radius of the sphere, the spherical cap is called a hemisphere .

Contents

Volume and surface area

The volume of the spherical cap and the area of the curved surface may be calculated using combinations of

These variables are inter-related through the formulas , , , and .

Using and Using and Using and
Volume [1]
Area [1]
Constraints

If denotes the latitude in geographic coordinates, then , and .

Deriving the surface area intuitively from the spherical sector volume

Note that aside from the calculus based argument below, the area of the spherical cap may be derived from the volume of the spherical sector, by an intuitive argument, [2] as

The intuitive argument is based upon summing the total sector volume from that of infinitesimal triangular pyramids. Utilizing the pyramid (or cone) volume formula of , where is the infinitesimal area of each pyramidal base (located on the surface of the sphere) and is the height of each pyramid from its base to its apex (at the center of the sphere). Since each , in the limit, is constant and equivalent to the radius of the sphere, the sum of the infinitesimal pyramidal bases would equal the area of the spherical sector, and:

Deriving the volume and surface area using calculus

Rotating the green area creates a spherical cap with height
h
{\displaystyle h}
and sphere radius
r
{\displaystyle r}
. Spherical cap from rotation.svg
Rotating the green area creates a spherical cap with height and sphere radius .

The volume and area formulas may be derived by examining the rotation of the function

for , using the formulas the surface of the rotation for the area and the solid of the revolution for the volume. The area is

The derivative of is

and hence

The formula for the area is therefore

The volume is

Applications

Volumes of union and intersection of two intersecting spheres

The volume of the union of two intersecting spheres of radii and is [3]

where

is the sum of the volumes of the two isolated spheres, and

the sum of the volumes of the two spherical caps forming their intersection. If is the distance between the two sphere centers, elimination of the variables and leads to [4] [5]

Volume of a spherical cap with a curved base

The volume of a spherical cap with a curved base can be calculated by considering two spheres with radii and , separated by some distance , and for which their surfaces intersect at . That is, the curvature of the base comes from sphere 2. The volume is thus the difference between sphere 2's cap (with height ) and sphere 1's cap (with height ),

This formula is valid only for configurations that satisfy and . If sphere 2 is very large such that , hence and , which is the case for a spherical cap with a base that has a negligible curvature, the above equation is equal to the volume of a spherical cap with a flat base, as expected.

Areas of intersecting spheres

Consider two intersecting spheres of radii and , with their centers separated by distance . They intersect if

From the law of cosines, the polar angle of the spherical cap on the sphere of radius is

Using this, the surface area of the spherical cap on the sphere of radius is

Surface area bounded by parallel disks

The curved surface area of the spherical segment bounded by two parallel disks is the difference of surface areas of their respective spherical caps. For a sphere of radius , and caps with heights and , the area is

or, using geographic coordinates with latitudes and , [6]

For example, assuming the Earth is a sphere of radius 6371 km, the surface area of the arctic (north of the Arctic Circle, at latitude 66.56° as of August 2016 [7] ) is 2π63712|sin 90° sin 66.56°| = 21.04 million km2 (8.12 million sq mi), or 0.5|sin 90° sin 66.56°| = 4.125% of the total surface area of the Earth.

This formula can also be used to demonstrate that half the surface area of the Earth lies between latitudes 30° South and 30° North in a spherical zone which encompasses all of the Tropics.

Generalizations

Sections of other solids

The spheroidal dome is obtained by sectioning off a portion of a spheroid so that the resulting dome is circularly symmetric (having an axis of rotation), and likewise the ellipsoidal dome is derived from the ellipsoid.

Hyperspherical cap

Generally, the -dimensional volume of a hyperspherical cap of height and radius in -dimensional Euclidean space is given by: [8]

where (the gamma function) is given by .

The formula for can be expressed in terms of the volume of the unit n-ball and the hypergeometric function or the regularized incomplete beta function as

and the area formula can be expressed in terms of the area of the unit n-ball as

where .

A. Chudnov [9] derived the following formulas:

where

For odd :

Asymptotics

If and , then where is the integral of the standard normal distribution. [10]

A more quantitative bound is . For large caps (that is when as ), the bound simplifies to . [11]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 Polyanin, Andrei D; Manzhirov, Alexander V. (2006), Handbook of Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists, CRC Press, p. 69, ISBN   9781584885023 .
  2. Shekhtman, Zor. "Unizor - Geometry3D - Spherical Sectors". YouTube. Zor Shekhtman. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 31 Dec 2018.
  3. Connolly, Michael L. (1985). "Computation of molecular volume". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 107 (5): 1118–1124. doi:10.1021/ja00291a006.
  4. Pavani, R.; Ranghino, G. (1982). "A method to compute the volume of a molecule". Computers & Chemistry. 6 (3): 133–135. doi:10.1016/0097-8485(82)80006-5.
  5. Bondi, A. (1964). "Van der Waals volumes and radii". The Journal of Physical Chemistry. 68 (3): 441–451. doi:10.1021/j100785a001.
  6. Scott E. Donaldson, Stanley G. Siegel (2001). Successful Software Development. ISBN   9780130868268 . Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  7. "Obliquity of the Ecliptic (Eps Mean)". Neoprogrammics.com. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  8. Li, S. (2011). "Consice Formulas for the Area and Volume of a Hyperspherical Cap" (PDF). Asian Journal of Mathematics and Statistics: 66–70.
  9. Chudnov, Alexander M. (1986). "On minimax signal generation and reception algorithms (engl. transl.)". Problems of Information Transmission. 22 (4): 49–54.
  10. Chudnov, Alexander M (1991). "Game-theoretical problems of synthesis of signal generation and reception algorithms (engl. transl.)". Problems of Information Transmission. 27 (3): 57–65.
  11. Becker, Anja; Ducas, Léo; Gama, Nicolas; Laarhoven, Thijs (10 January 2016). Krauthgamer, Robert (ed.). New directions in nearest neighbor searching with applications to lattice sieving. Twenty-seventh Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms (SODA '16), Arlington, Virginia. Philadelphia: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. pp. 10–24. ISBN   978-1-61197-433-1.

Further reading