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volume of the -sphere
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(Derivation)
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The volume contained inside $S^n$ , the $n$ -sphere (or hypersphere), is given by the integral $$ V(n) = \int_{\sum_{i=1}^{n+1}x_i^2\le1} d^{n+1} x. $$ Going to polar coordinates ($r^2=\sum_{i=1}^{n+1}x_i^2$ ) this becomes $$ V(n) = \int_{S^n} d\Omega \int_0^1 r^{n}\, dr. $$ The first integral is the integral over all solid angles subtended by the sphere and is equal to its area $A(n)=\frac{2\pi^{\frac{n+1}{2}}}{\Gamma\left(\frac{n+1}{2}\right)}$ , where $\Gamma(x)$ is the gamma function. The second integral is elementary and evaluates to $\int_0^1 r^{n}\, dr = 1/(n+1)$ .
Finally, the volume is $$ V(n) = \frac{\pi^{\frac{n+1}{2}}}{\frac{n+1}{2}\Gamma\left(\frac{n+1}{2}\right)} = \frac{\pi^{\frac{n+1}{2}}}{\Gamma\left(\frac{n+3}{2}\right)}. $$ If the sphere has radius $R$ instead of $1$ , then the correct volume is $V(n)R^{n+1}$ .
Note that this formula works for $n\ge0$ . The first few cases are
- $n=0$
- $\Gamma(3/2)=\sqrt{\pi}/2$ , hence $V(0)=2$ (this is the length of the interval $[-1,1]$ in $\R$ );
- $n=1$
- $\Gamma(2)=1$ , hence $V(1) = \pi$ (this is the familiar result for the area of the unit circle);
- $n=2$
- $\Gamma(5/2)=3\sqrt{\pi}/4$ , hence $V(2) = 4\pi/3$ (this is the familiar result for the volume of the unit sphere);
- $n=3$
- $\Gamma(3)=2$ , hence $V(3) = \pi^2/2$ .
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"volume of the -sphere" is owned by CWoo. [ owner history (1) ]
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Cross-references: unit circle, interval, length, formula, radius, gamma function, area, sphere, solid angles, polar coordinates, integral, hypersphere, contained, volume
This is version 7 of volume of the -sphere, born on 2003-07-23, modified 2006-10-18.
Object id is 4496, canonical name is VolumeOfTheNSphere.
Accessed 10421 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 51M05 (Geometry :: Real and complex geometry :: Euclidean geometries and generalizations) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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