The surface area (symbol A) of a solid object is a measure of the total area that the surface of the object occupies. The mathematical definition of surface area in the presence of curved surfaces is considerably more involved than the definition of arc length of one-dimensional curves, or of the surface area for polyhedra (i.e., objects with flat polygonal faces), for which the surface area is the sum of the areas of its faces. Smooth surfaces, such as a sphere, are assigned surface area using their representation as parametric surfaces. This definition of surface area is based on methods of infinitesimal calculus and involves partial derivatives and double integration.
A general definition of surface area was sought by Henri Lebesgue and Hermann Minkowski at the turn of the twentieth century. Their work led to the development of geometric measure theory, which studies various notions of surface area for irregular objects of any dimension. An important example is the Minkowski content of a surface.
Definition
While the areas of many simple surfaces have been known since antiquity, a rigorous mathematical definition of area requires a great deal of care. This should provide a function
which assigns a positive real number to a certain class of surfaces that satisfies several natural requirements. The most fundamental property of the surface area is its additivity: the area of the whole is the sum of the areas of the parts. More rigorously, if a surface S is a union of finitely many pieces S1, …, Sr which do not overlap except at their boundaries, then
Surface areas of flat polygonal shapes must agree with their geometrically defined area. Since surface area is a geometric notion, areas of congruent surfaces must be the same and the area must depend only on the shape of the surface, but not on its position and orientation in space. This means that surface area is invariant under the group of Euclidean motions. These properties uniquely characterize surface area for a wide class of geometric surfaces called piecewise smooth. Such surfaces consist of finitely many pieces that can be represented in the parametric form
with a continuously differentiable function The area of an individual piece is defined by the formula
Thus the area of SD is obtained by integrating the length of the normal vector to the surface over the appropriate region D in the parametric uv plane. The area of the whole surface is then obtained by adding together the areas of the pieces, using additivity of surface area. The main formula can be specialized to different classes of surfaces, giving, in particular, formulas for areas of graphs z = f(x,y) and surfaces of revolution.
One of the subtleties of surface area, as compared to arc length of curves, is that surface area cannot be defined simply as the limit of areas of polyhedral shapes approximating a given smooth surface. It was demonstrated by Hermann Schwarz that already for the cylinder, different choices of approximating flat surfaces can lead to different limiting values of the area; this example is known as the Schwarz lantern.
Various approaches to a general definition of surface area were developed in the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century by Henri Lebesgue and Hermann Minkowski. While for piecewise smooth surfaces there is a unique natural notion of surface area, if a surface is very irregular, or rough, then it may not be possible to assign an area to it at all. A typical example is given by a surface with spikes spread throughout in a dense fashion. Many surfaces of this type occur in the study of fractals. Extensions of the notion of area which partially fulfill its function and may be defined even for very badly irregular surfaces are studied in geometric measure theory. A specific example of such an extension is the Minkowski content of the surface.
Common formulas
Shape | Formula/Equation | Variables |
---|---|---|
Cube | a = side length | |
Cuboid | l = length, b = breadth, h = height | |
Triangular prism | b = base length of triangle, h = height of triangle, l = distance between triangular bases, p, q, r = sides of triangle | |
All prisms | B = the area of one base, P = the perimeter of one base, h = height | |
Sphere | r = radius of sphere, d = diameter | |
Hemisphere | r = radius of the hemisphere | |
Hemispherical shell | R = external radius of hemisphere, r = internal radius of hemisphere | |
Spherical lune | r = radius of sphere, θ = dihedral angle | |
Torus | r = minor radius (radius of the tube), R = major radius (distance from center of tube to center of torus) | |
Closed cylinder | r = radius of the circular base, h = height of the cylinder | |
Cylindrical annulus | R = External radius r = Internal radius, h = height | |
Capsule | r = radius of the hemispheres and cylinder, h = height of the cylinder | |
Curved surface area of a cone | s = slant height of the cone, r = radius of the circular base, h = height of the cone | |
Full surface area of a cone | s = slant height of the cone, r = radius of the circular base, h = height of the cone | |
Regular Pyramid | B = area of base, P = perimeter of base, s = slant height | |
Square pyramid | b = base length, s = slant height, h = vertical height | |
Rectangular pyramid | l = length, b = breadth, h = height | |
Tetrahedron | a = side length | |
Surface of revolution | ||
Parametric surface | = parametric vector equation of surface, = partial derivative of with respect to , |
Ratio of surface areas of a sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height
The below given formulas can be used to show that the surface area of a sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height are in the ratio 2 : 3, as follows.
Let the radius be r and the height be h (which is 2r for the sphere).
The discovery of this ratio is credited to Archimedes.
In chemistry
Surface area is important in chemical kinetics. Increasing the surface area of a substance generally increases the rate of a chemical reaction. For example, iron in a fine powder will combust, while in solid blocks it is stable enough to use in structures. For different applications a minimal or maximal surface area may be desired.
In biology
The surface area of an organism is important in several considerations, such as regulation of body temperature and digestion. Animals use their teeth to grind food down into smaller particles, increasing the surface area available for digestion. The epithelial tissue lining the digestive tract contains microvilli, greatly increasing the area available for absorption.Elephants have large ears, allowing them to regulate their own body temperature. In other instances, animals will need to minimize surface area; for example, people will fold their arms over their chest when cold to minimize heat loss.
The surface area to volume ratio (SA:V) of a cell imposes upper limits on size, as the volume increases much faster than does the surface area, thus limiting the rate at which substances diffuse from the interior across the cell membrane to interstitial spaces or to other cells. Indeed, representing a cell as an idealized sphere of radius r, the volume and surface area are, respectively, V = (4/3)πr3 and SA = 4πr2. The resulting surface area to volume ratio is therefore 3/r. Thus, if a cell has a radius of 1 μm, the SA:V ratio is 3; whereas if the radius of the cell is instead 10 μm, then the SA:V ratio becomes 0.3. With a cell radius of 100, SA:V ratio is 0.03. Thus, the surface area falls off steeply with increasing volume.
See also
- Perimeter length
- Projected area
- BET theory, technique for the measurement of the specific surface area of materials
- Spherical area
- Surface integral
References
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Surface Area". MathWorld.
- "Schwarz's Paradox" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 December 2011. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - Rorres, Chris. "Tomb of Archimedes: Sources". Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Archived from the original on 9 December 2006. Retrieved 2 January 2007.
- Nasr, Somaye; Plucknett, Kevin P. (20 February 2014). "Kinetics of Iron Ore Reduction by Methane for Chemical Looping Combustion". Energy & Fuels. 28 (2): 1387–1395. doi:10.1021/ef402142q. ISSN 0887-0624.
- Paumard, Patrick; Vaillier, Jacques; Coulary, Bénédicte; Schaeffer, Jacques; Soubannier, Vincent; Mueller, David M.; Brèthes, Daniel; di Rago, Jean-Paul; Velours, Jean (1 February 2002). "The ATP synthase is involved in generating mitochondrial cristae morphology". The EMBO Journal. 21 (3): 221–230. doi:10.1093/emboj/21.3.221. PMC 125827. PMID 11823415.
- Narasimhan, Arunn (1 July 2008). "Why do elephants have big ear flaps?". Resonance. 13 (7): 638–647. doi:10.1007/s12045-008-0070-5. ISSN 0973-712X.
- Feher, Joseph (2012), "Mouth and Esophagus", Quantitative Human Physiology, Elsevier, pp. 689–700, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-382163-8.00077-3, ISBN 978-0-12-382163-8, retrieved 30 March 2024
- "Microvillus | Description, Anatomy, & Function | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
- Wright, P. G. (1984). "Why do elephants flap their ears?". African Zoology. 19 (4): 266–269. ISSN 2224-073X.
- Stocks, Jodie M.; Taylor, Nigel A.S.; Tipton, Michael J.; Greenleaf, John E. (1 May 2004). "Human Physiological Responses to Cold Exposure". Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 75 (5): 444–457. PMID 15152898.
- Deaver, James R. (1 November 1978). "Modeling Limits to Cell Size". The American Biology Teacher. 40 (8): 502–504. doi:10.2307/4446369. ISSN 0002-7685. JSTOR 4446369.
- Yu.D. Burago; V.A. Zalgaller; L.D. Kudryavtsev (2001) [1994], "Area", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
External links
- Surface Area Video at Thinkwell
The surface area symbol A of a solid object is a measure of the total area that the surface of the object occupies The mathematical definition of surface area in the presence of curved surfaces is considerably more involved than the definition of arc length of one dimensional curves or of the surface area for polyhedra i e objects with flat polygonal faces for which the surface area is the sum of the areas of its faces Smooth surfaces such as a sphere are assigned surface area using their representation as parametric surfaces This definition of surface area is based on methods of infinitesimal calculus and involves partial derivatives and double integration A sphere of radius r has surface area 4pr2 A general definition of surface area was sought by Henri Lebesgue and Hermann Minkowski at the turn of the twentieth century Their work led to the development of geometric measure theory which studies various notions of surface area for irregular objects of any dimension An important example is the Minkowski content of a surface DefinitionWhile the areas of many simple surfaces have been known since antiquity a rigorous mathematical definition of area requires a great deal of care This should provide a function S A S displaystyle S mapsto A S which assigns a positive real number to a certain class of surfaces that satisfies several natural requirements The most fundamental property of the surface area is its additivity the area of the whole is the sum of the areas of the parts More rigorously if a surface S is a union of finitely many pieces S1 Sr which do not overlap except at their boundaries then A S A S1 A Sr displaystyle A S A S 1 cdots A S r Surface areas of flat polygonal shapes must agree with their geometrically defined area Since surface area is a geometric notion areas of congruent surfaces must be the same and the area must depend only on the shape of the surface but not on its position and orientation in space This means that surface area is invariant under the group of Euclidean motions These properties uniquely characterize surface area for a wide class of geometric surfaces called piecewise smooth Such surfaces consist of finitely many pieces that can be represented in the parametric form SD r r u v u v D displaystyle S D vec r vec r u v quad u v in D with a continuously differentiable function r displaystyle vec r The area of an individual piece is defined by the formula A SD D r u r v dudv displaystyle A S D iint D left vec r u times vec r v right du dv Thus the area of SD is obtained by integrating the length of the normal vector r u r v displaystyle vec r u times vec r v to the surface over the appropriate region D in the parametric uv plane The area of the whole surface is then obtained by adding together the areas of the pieces using additivity of surface area The main formula can be specialized to different classes of surfaces giving in particular formulas for areas of graphs z f x y and surfaces of revolution Schwarz lantern with M displaystyle M axial slices and N displaystyle N radial vertices The limit of the area as M displaystyle M and N displaystyle N tend to infinity doesn t converge In particular it doesn t converge to the area of the cylinder One of the subtleties of surface area as compared to arc length of curves is that surface area cannot be defined simply as the limit of areas of polyhedral shapes approximating a given smooth surface It was demonstrated by Hermann Schwarz that already for the cylinder different choices of approximating flat surfaces can lead to different limiting values of the area this example is known as the Schwarz lantern Various approaches to a general definition of surface area were developed in the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century by Henri Lebesgue and Hermann Minkowski While for piecewise smooth surfaces there is a unique natural notion of surface area if a surface is very irregular or rough then it may not be possible to assign an area to it at all A typical example is given by a surface with spikes spread throughout in a dense fashion Many surfaces of this type occur in the study of fractals Extensions of the notion of area which partially fulfill its function and may be defined even for very badly irregular surfaces are studied in geometric measure theory A specific example of such an extension is the Minkowski content of the surface Common formulasSurface areas of common solids Shape Formula Equation VariablesCube 6a2 displaystyle 6a 2 a side lengthCuboid 2 lb lh bh displaystyle 2 left lb lh bh right l length b breadth h heightTriangular prism bh l p q r displaystyle bh l left p q r right b base length of triangle h height of triangle l distance between triangular bases p q r sides of triangleAll prisms 2B Ph displaystyle 2B Ph B the area of one base P the perimeter of one base h heightSphere 4pr2 pd2 displaystyle 4 pi r 2 pi d 2 r radius of sphere d diameterHemisphere 2pr2 displaystyle 2 pi r 2 r radius of the hemisphereHemispherical shell p 3R2 r2 displaystyle pi left 3R 2 r 2 right R external radius of hemisphere r internal radius of hemisphereSpherical lune 2r28 displaystyle 2r 2 theta r radius of sphere 8 dihedral angleTorus 2pr 2pR 4p2Rr displaystyle left 2 pi r right left 2 pi R right 4 pi 2 Rr r minor radius radius of the tube R major radius distance from center of tube to center of torus Closed cylinder 2pr2 2prh 2pr r h displaystyle 2 pi r 2 2 pi rh 2 pi r left r h right r radius of the circular base h height of the cylinderCylindrical annulus 2pRh 2prh 2 pR2 pr2 2p R r R r h displaystyle 2 pi Rh 2 pi rh 2 pi R 2 pi r 2 2 pi R r R r h R External radius r Internal radius h heightCapsule 2pr 2r h displaystyle 2 pi r 2r h r radius of the hemispheres and cylinder h height of the cylinderCurved surface area of a cone prr2 h2 prs displaystyle pi r sqrt r 2 h 2 pi rs s r2 h2 displaystyle s sqrt r 2 h 2 s slant height of the cone r radius of the circular base h height of the coneFull surface area of a cone pr r r2 h2 pr r s displaystyle pi r left r sqrt r 2 h 2 right pi r left r s right s slant height of the cone r radius of the circular base h height of the coneRegular Pyramid B Ps2 displaystyle B frac Ps 2 B area of base P perimeter of base s slant heightSquare pyramid b2 2bs b2 2b b2 2 h2 displaystyle b 2 2bs b 2 2b sqrt left frac b 2 right 2 h 2 b base length s slant height h vertical heightRectangular pyramid lb l b2 2 h2 b l2 2 h2 displaystyle lb l sqrt left frac b 2 right 2 h 2 b sqrt left frac l 2 right 2 h 2 l length b breadth h heightTetrahedron 3a2 displaystyle sqrt 3 a 2 a side lengthSurface of revolution 2p abf x 1 f x 2dx displaystyle 2 pi int a b f x sqrt 1 f x 2 dx Parametric surface D r u r v dA displaystyle iint D left vert vec r u times vec r v right vert dA r displaystyle vec r parametric vector equation of surface r u displaystyle vec r u partial derivative of r displaystyle vec r with respect to u displaystyle u r v displaystyle vec r v partial derivative of r displaystyle vec r with respect to v displaystyle v D displaystyle D shadow regionRatio of surface areas of a sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height A cone sphere and cylinder of radius r and height h The below given formulas can be used to show that the surface area of a sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height are in the ratio 2 3 as follows Let the radius be r and the height be h which is 2r for the sphere Sphere surface area 4pr2 2pr2 2Cylinder surface area 2pr h r 2pr 2r r 2pr2 3 displaystyle begin array rlll text Sphere surface area amp 4 pi r 2 amp amp 2 pi r 2 times 2 text Cylinder surface area amp 2 pi r h r amp 2 pi r 2r r amp 2 pi r 2 times 3 end array The discovery of this ratio is credited to Archimedes In chemistrySurface area of particles of different sizes Surface area is important in chemical kinetics Increasing the surface area of a substance generally increases the rate of a chemical reaction For example iron in a fine powder will combust while in solid blocks it is stable enough to use in structures For different applications a minimal or maximal surface area may be desired In biologyThe inner membrane of the mitochondrion has a large surface area due to infoldings allowing higher rates of cellular respiration electron micrograph The surface area of an organism is important in several considerations such as regulation of body temperature and digestion Animals use their teeth to grind food down into smaller particles increasing the surface area available for digestion The epithelial tissue lining the digestive tract contains microvilli greatly increasing the area available for absorption Elephants have large ears allowing them to regulate their own body temperature In other instances animals will need to minimize surface area for example people will fold their arms over their chest when cold to minimize heat loss The surface area to volume ratio SA V of a cell imposes upper limits on size as the volume increases much faster than does the surface area thus limiting the rate at which substances diffuse from the interior across the cell membrane to interstitial spaces or to other cells Indeed representing a cell as an idealized sphere of radius r the volume and surface area are respectively V 4 3 pr3 and SA 4pr2 The resulting surface area to volume ratio is therefore 3 r Thus if a cell has a radius of 1 mm the SA V ratio is 3 whereas if the radius of the cell is instead 10 mm then the SA V ratio becomes 0 3 With a cell radius of 100 SA V ratio is 0 03 Thus the surface area falls off steeply with increasing volume See alsoPerimeter length Projected area BET theory technique for the measurement of the specific surface area of materials Spherical area Surface integralReferencesWeisstein Eric W Surface Area MathWorld Schwarz s Paradox PDF Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2017 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 15 December 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2012 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Rorres Chris Tomb of Archimedes Sources Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences Archived from the original on 9 December 2006 Retrieved 2 January 2007 Nasr Somaye Plucknett Kevin P 20 February 2014 Kinetics of Iron Ore Reduction by Methane for Chemical Looping Combustion Energy amp Fuels 28 2 1387 1395 doi 10 1021 ef402142q ISSN 0887 0624 Paumard Patrick Vaillier Jacques Coulary Benedicte Schaeffer Jacques Soubannier Vincent Mueller David M Brethes Daniel di Rago Jean Paul Velours Jean 1 February 2002 The ATP synthase is involved in generating mitochondrial cristae morphology The EMBO Journal 21 3 221 230 doi 10 1093 emboj 21 3 221 PMC 125827 PMID 11823415 Narasimhan Arunn 1 July 2008 Why do elephants have big ear flaps Resonance 13 7 638 647 doi 10 1007 s12045 008 0070 5 ISSN 0973 712X Feher Joseph 2012 Mouth and Esophagus Quantitative Human Physiology Elsevier pp 689 700 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 382163 8 00077 3 ISBN 978 0 12 382163 8 retrieved 30 March 2024 Microvillus Description Anatomy amp Function Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 30 March 2024 Wright P G 1984 Why do elephants flap their ears African Zoology 19 4 266 269 ISSN 2224 073X Stocks Jodie M Taylor Nigel A S Tipton Michael J Greenleaf John E 1 May 2004 Human Physiological Responses to Cold Exposure Aviation Space and Environmental Medicine 75 5 444 457 PMID 15152898 Deaver James R 1 November 1978 Modeling Limits to Cell Size The American Biology Teacher 40 8 502 504 doi 10 2307 4446369 ISSN 0002 7685 JSTOR 4446369 Yu D Burago V A Zalgaller L D Kudryavtsev 2001 1994 Area Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS PressExternal linksSurface Area Video at Thinkwell