calculating the circumference of an ellipse

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bwanaaa

Senior member
Dec 26, 2002
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I have searched for the answer and always find that there is an open solution (integral).

C1 = INTEGRAL(0->2pi) sqrt(a^2 * cos^2[t]+b^2 *sin^2[t]) dt.

(a nicer page is here:
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/formulas/faq.ellipse.circumference.html)

plugging this into wolfram alpha runs out of computation time but a similar integral here
C2 = INTEGRAL(0->2pi) (a^2 * cos^2[t]+b^2 *sin^2[t]) dt.

(here:
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=integrate+(a^2*cos^2[t]+b^2*sin^2[t])+dt+++from+t=0+to+2pi
)

gives
pi * (a^2 + b^2)

I assume that the first equation (c1) is intregate-able as well, but do not have the resources (mathematica) to calculate it. Is there anyone here with math-ability?
 

Turtle.Man

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Mar 20, 2010
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My "mathability" has about 25 years of rust on it, but all of the methods that I've seen for solving this problem are approximations. I don't believe that there is a (known) closed form solution.
 

Essence_of_War

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Feb 21, 2013
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