Ellipsoid surface area usually needs an approximation because a general ellipsoid has three semi-axes, a, b, and c. Only the sphere case, where all three are equal, has the simple formula 4πr2.
Ellipsoid vs Sphere
| Shape | Semi-Axes | Surface Area Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Sphere | a = b = c = r | 4πr2 |
| Spheroid | two axes equal | Exact formulas exist, but use special functions or inverse trig |
| General ellipsoid | a, b, c all may differ | No simple elementary formula |
What the Semi-Axes Mean
b = semi-axis in the second direction
c = semi-axis in the third direction
Each semi-axis is half of the full width in that direction.
If an object is 20 cm long, 14 cm wide, and 10 cm tall, the semi-axes are a = 10, b = 7, and c = 5. Using full diameters in an ellipsoid formula will make the result too large.
Knud Thomsen Approximation
The most practical formula for calculator use is the Knud Thomsen approximation. It is compact, works for many ellipsoid shapes, and is accurate enough for most classroom, design, and estimation problems.
p approx 1.6075
Worked Example
SA approx 4π [(10p7p + 10p5p + 7p5p) / 3]1/p
SA approx 580.1 cm2
When the Approximation Is Reliable
| Axis Pattern | Use Knud Thomsen? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Axes close together | Yes | Shape is near a sphere |
| Moderately stretched ellipsoid | Yes for estimation | Error is usually small enough for practical work |
| Very long or very flat ellipsoid | Use caution | Error can matter more as axis ratios become extreme |
| Engineering tolerance work | Use numerical method | Approximation may not meet tolerance requirements |
Approximation vs Exact Calculation
For a sphere, the formula is exact. For a general ellipsoid, exact surface area involves elliptic integrals, which are not convenient for most users. That is why calculator pages normally use a documented approximation or numerical integration.
Common Mistakes
- Using diameters instead of semi-axes: divide length, width, and height by 2 first.
- Expecting the sphere formula to work:
4πr2only works when all axes are equal. - Rounding axes too early: keep the semi-axes precise until the final answer.
- Using ellipsoid area for a rough object: bumps, caps, seams, and flattened sides change real surface area.
Use the Calculator
Use the Ellipsoid Surface Area Calculator when you have three semi-axes or three full dimensions. For the formula details, see the Knud Thomsen formula. For simpler related cases, compare the Sphere Surface Area Calculator, sphere surface area derivation, and hemisphere vs sphere formulas.