Shape of an ellipsoid |
McCuhil (very likely not his real name [clearly, for good reason]) went straight to a website that purported to have a formula for the volume of an ellipse. Had Finn not been innumerate, he would have known that 1) an ellipse is not the same thing as an oval; and 2) a two-dimensional shape like an oval (or an ellipse) does not have volume, which requires three dimensions. His examples of a casserole dish and a horse trough are not the three-dimensional shape, an ellipsoid, that is an ellipse rotated around one of its axes.
In other words, McCuhil was full of crap. Here's what he said to do to determine the volume of an oval horse trough:
- "Find the radius of each dimension."
- "Write down your answers..."
- "Enter the following into your calculator: 4 / 3 * 3.14 * r1 * r2 * r3 =. When you hit the = key, your answer will appear on the screen..."
An "oval" baking dish may be elliptical, but it still isn't an ellipsoid. An oval horse trough is likely to be a a rectangle with rounded ends, but is most certainly not an ellipsoid. That Leaf Group has allowed this garbage to stand for almost a decade is unconscionable, and that they paid our Dumbass of the Day to "write" it in the first place is, well, unfathomable.
copyright © 2019-2022 scmrak
MM - GEOMETRY
No comments:
Post a Comment