In mathematics, the Minkowski–Steiner formula is a formula relating the surface area and volume of compact subsets of Euclidean space. More precisely, it defines the surface area as the "derivative" of enclosed volume in an appropriate sense.
The Minkowski–Steiner formula is used, together with the Brunn–Minkowski theorem, to prove the isoperimetric inequality. It is named after Hermann Minkowski and Jakob Steiner.
Let
, and let
be a compact set. Let
denote the Lebesgue measure (volume) of
. Define the quantity
by the Minkowski–Steiner formula

where

denotes the closed ball of radius
, and

is the Minkowski sum of
and
, so that

Surface measure
For "sufficiently regular" sets
, the quantity
does indeed correspond with the
-dimensional measure of the boundary
of
. See Federer (1969) for a full treatment of this problem.
Convex sets
When the set
is a convex set, the lim-inf above is a true limit, and one can show that

where the
are some continuous functions of
(see quermassintegrals) and
denotes the measure (volume) of the unit ball in
:

where
denotes the Gamma function.
Example: volume and surface area of a ball
Taking
gives the following well-known formula for the surface area of the sphere of radius
,
:
![{\displaystyle =\lim _{\delta \to 0}{\frac {[(R+\delta )^{n}-R^{n}]\omega _{n}}{\delta }}}](./bf2dab443dccfcaa5e285f5476539fe9f5c54406.svg)

where
is as above.
References
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Basic concepts | |
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Sets | |
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Types of measures | |
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Particular measures | |
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Maps | |
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Main results | |
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Other results | |
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Applications & related | |
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