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  2. Spheroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spheroid

    The word spheroid originally meant "an approximately spherical body", admitting irregularities even beyond the bi- or tri-axial ellipsoidal shape; that is how the term is used in some older papers on geodesy (for example, referring to truncated spherical harmonic expansions of the Earth's gravity geopotential model). [1]

  3. Figure of the Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_of_the_Earth

    Thus, geodesy represents the figure of the Earth as an oblate spheroid. The oblate spheroid, or oblate ellipsoid, is an ellipsoid of revolution obtained by rotating an ellipse about its shorter axis. It is the regular geometric shape that most nearly approximates the shape of the Earth. A spheroid describing the figure of the Earth or other ...

  4. Oblate spheroidal coordinates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oblate_spheroidal_coordinates

    Oblate spheroidal coordinates are often useful in solving partial differential equations when the boundary conditions are defined on an oblate spheroid or a hyperboloid of revolution. For example, they played an important role in the calculation of the Perrin friction factors , which contributed to the awarding of the 1926 Nobel Prize in ...

  5. Earth ellipsoid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_ellipsoid

    In geophysics, geodesy, and related areas, the word 'ellipsoid' is understood to mean 'oblate ellipsoid of revolution', and the older term 'oblate spheroid' is hardly used. [2] [3] For bodies that cannot be well approximated by an ellipsoid of revolution a triaxial (or scalene) ellipsoid is used.

  6. Maclaurin spheroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacLaurin_spheroid

    For a Maclaurin spheroid of eccentricity greater than 0.812670, [3] a Jacobi ellipsoid of the same angular momentum has lower total energy. If such a spheroid is composed of a viscous fluid (or in the presence of gravitational radiation reaction), and if it suffers a perturbation which breaks its rotational symmetry, then it will gradually elongate into the Jacobi ellipsoidal form, while ...

  7. Centrifugal force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugal_force

    For example, the oblateness of a sphere of freely flowing material is often explained in terms of centrifugal force. The oblate spheroid shape reflects, following Clairaut's theorem, the balance between containment by gravitational attraction and dispersal by centrifugal force. That the Earth is itself an oblate spheroid, bulging at the equator ...

  8. Flattening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flattening

    A sphere of radius a compressed to an oblate ellipsoid of revolution. Flattening is a measure of the compression of a circle or sphere along a diameter to form an ellipse or an ellipsoid of revolution respectively. Other terms used are ellipticity, or oblateness.

  9. Talk:Spheroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Spheroid

    I propose Oblate spheroid and Prolate spheroid be merged into this page, and turned into redirects. Much of the content is redundant except for the real-world examples of Oblate/Prolate spheroids. 67.252.103.23 01:48, 8 June 2014 (UTC) I think this is a good idea. cffk 03:29, 8 June 2014 (UTC) I agree.