Home

Prolate

Prolate is an adjective used in geometry, physics, and related disciplines to describe a body that is elongated along its principal axis; its opposite is oblate, which is flattened at the poles. The term is commonly applied to ellipsoids and spheroids.

In geometry, a prolate spheroid is a special case of an ellipsoid obtained by rotating an ellipse

In physics and astronomy, the term prolate describes elongated shapes or deformations. In nuclear physics, nuclei

Related terms include oblate, which describes flattening at the poles; ellipsoid and spheroid, which are broader

about
its
major
axis.
If
the
semi-major
axis
is
a
and
the
two
equal
semi-minor
axes
are
b,
with
a
>
b,
the
figure
is
prolate.
The
volume
is
V
=
4/3
π
a
b^2.
The
surface
area
has
a
closed
form
in
terms
of
the
eccentricity
e
=
sqrt(1
−
(b^2/a^2))
and
is
S
=
2π
b^2
[1
+
(a/(e
b))
arcsin
e].
As
b
approaches
a,
the
prolate
spheroid
approaches
a
sphere.
may
exhibit
prolate
shapes
in
certain
excited
states,
characterized
by
a
positive
quadrupole
deformation
parameter
β2.
In
astrophysics
and
planetary
science,
galaxies,
dark
matter
halos,
and
some
asteroids
or
stars
can
be
modeled
as
prolate
ellipsoids
when
their
mass
or
density
distributions
are
stretched
along
one
axis.
categories
of
three-axis
shapes.
A
common
everyday
analogy
is
the
rugby
ball
or
American
football
shape,
which
resembles
a
prolate
spheroid
when
cross-sections
are
circular
in
the
minor
axes.