This article is about the physical quantity. For other uses, see Area (disambiguation).
Area is a quantity expressing the two-dimensional size of a defined part of a surface, typically a region bounded by a closed curve. The term surface area refers to the total area of the exposed surface of a 3-dimensional solid, such as the sum of the areas of the exposed sides of a polyhedron. Area is an important invariant in the differential geometry of surfaces.
Area is a quantity expressing the size of a figure in the Euclidean plane or on a 2-dimensionalsurface. Points and lines have zero area, cf. space-filling curves. A figure may have infinite area, for example the entire Euclidean plane. The 3-dimensional analog of area is the volume. Although area seems to be one of the basic notions in geometry, it is not easy to define even in the Euclidean plane. Most textbooks avoid defining an area, relying on self-evidence. For polygons in the Euclidean plane, one can proceed as follows:
The area of a polygon in the Euclidean plane is a positive number such that:
(additivity) If a polygon is a union of two polygons which do not have common interior points, then its area is the sum of the areas of these polygons.
It remains to show that the notion of area thus defined does not depend on the way one subdivides a polygon into smaller parts.
A typical way to introduce area is through the more advanced notion of Lebesgue measure. In the presence of the axiom of choice it is possible to prove the existence of shapes whose Lebesgue measure cannot be meaningfully defined. Such 'shapes' (they cannot a fortiori be simply visualised) enter into Tarski's circle-squaring problem (and, moving to three dimensions, in the Banach–Tarski paradox). The sets involved do not arise in practical matters.
In three dimensions, the analog of area is called volume. The n dimensional analog is defined by means of a measure or as a Lebesgue integral.
Additional formulas
Areas of 2-dimensional figures
a triangle: (where B is any side, and h is the distance from the line on which B lies to the other vertex of the triangle). This formula can be used if the height h is known. If the lengths of the three sides are known then Heron's formula can be used: (where a, b, c are the sides of the triangle, and is half of its perimeter) If an angle and its two included sides are given, then area=absinC where C is the given angle and a and b are its included sides. If the triangle is graphed on a coordinate plane, a matrix can be used and is simplified to the absolute value of (x1(y2-y3)+x2(y3-y1)+x3(y1-y2) all divided by 2. This formula is also known as the shoelace formula and is an easy way to solve for the area of a coordinate triangle by substituting the 3 points, (x1,y1) (x2,y2) (x3,y 3) Another approach for a coordinate triangle is to use calculus to find the area.
Area in calculus
The area between two graphs can be evaluated by calculating the difference between the integrals of the two functions
the area between the graphs of two functions is equal to the integral of one function, f(x), minus the integral of the other function, g(x).
an area bounded by a function r = r(θ) expressed in polar coordinates is .
cone: , where r is the radius of the circular base, and h is the height. That can also be rewritten as πr2 + πrl where r is the radius and l is the slant height of the cone. πr2 is the base area while πrl is the lateral surface area of the cone.
prism: 2 * Area of Base + Perimeter of Base * Height
The general formula for the surface area of the graph of a continuously differentiable function z = f(x,y), where and D is a region in the xy-plane with the smooth boundary:
Even more general formula for the area of the graph of a parametric surface in the vector form where is a continuously differentiable vector function of :
Area minimisation
Given a wire contour, the surface of least area spanning ("filling") it is a minimal surface. Familiar examples include soap bubbles.