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Oloid enclosed Volume

Description

An oloid is a three-dimensional curved geometric object that was discovered by Paul Schatz in 1929. It is the convex hull of a skeletal frame made by placing two linked congruent circles in perpendicular planes, so that the center of each circle lies on the other circle. The distance between the circle centers equals the radius of the circles. One third of each circle’s’ perimeter lies inside the convex hull, so the same shape may be also formed as the convex hull of the two remaining circular arcs each spanning an angle of 4π/3.The enclosed volume can be calculated approximately.

Related formulas

Variables

VEnclosed Volume of the Oloid (m3)
rRadius of the circle (or the distance between the circle centers) (m)