Sphere Calculator
Calculate the volume and surface area of any sphere from its radius.
What is a Sphere?
A sphere is a perfectly round three-dimensional geometric object. It is defined as the set of all points in three-dimensional space that are equidistant from a fixed central point. That distance from the center to any point on the surface is the radius (r). The diameter is twice the radius - the maximum straight-line distance across the sphere through its center.
Spheres are the three-dimensional counterpart of circles, and they share the same defining property: constant distance from a center point. Just as a circle is the most efficient two-dimensional shape (encloses maximum area for a given perimeter), a sphere is the most efficient three-dimensional shape - it encloses the maximum volume for a given surface area. This is the geometric reason why soap bubbles, liquid droplets in microgravity, and planetary bodies all tend toward spherical forms.
The two principal measurements of a sphere are its volume and surface area. Volume tells you how much three-dimensional space the sphere occupies - how much liquid it could hold, for instance. Surface area tells you how much material would be needed to cover the sphere’s outer surface - relevant in painting, coating, or heat transfer calculations.
The volume formula, (4/3)πr³, grows with the cube of the radius, meaning small increases in radius lead to large increases in volume. The surface area formula, 4πr², grows with the square of the radius. This difference in scaling rates has important practical implications: a sphere twice as large has 4 times the surface area but 8 times the volume, meaning large spheres are proportionally more efficient at containing volume per unit of surface area.
Spheres appear throughout science and engineering: ball bearings for mechanical efficiency, spherical tanks for storing pressurised gases (optimal shape for uniform stress distribution), spherical lenses in optics, and of course the roughly spherical shapes of planets and stars formed by gravitational self-compression.
Formula
Volume of a Sphere:
Surface Area of a Sphere:
Diameter:
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the radius of your sphere in the input field. Use any unit (cm, m, inches, feet).
- Click Calculate to instantly compute the volume, surface area, and diameter.
- Read the results - volume is in cubic units, surface area is in square units, and diameter is in the same linear unit as the radius.
- Real-world application - for example, if you know the diameter of a ball (say, a basketball with diameter 24 cm), enter radius = 12 to find its volume and surface area.
Example Calculations
Example 1 - Football (Soccer Ball)
A standard football has a radius of approximately 11 cm. Calculate its volume and surface area.
Example 2 - Large Storage Tank
A spherical water tank has a radius of 3 m. How much water can it hold?