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I know that the Earth isn't a sphere, not even an ellipsoid, but for my measurements, its an acceptable approximation. Assuming I have a coordinate(lat,lon) and a distance( e.g.: 1000km ), what is the surface area on the earth with that distance radius?

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Just a small amplification of the answer by Ross Millikan. Use the same notation as the article he linked to. I take it that your $1000$ km is the surface of the Earth distance from the center $C$ of your circle to the furthest points $P$ from the center. In the picture linked to, $C$ is the top of the sphere, and $P$ is any point on outer edge of the bottom of the cap.

Assume that this surface of the Earth distance is $d$, and that is is $\le$ $1/4$ of the circumference of the Earth (that's not necessary, but it makes visualization easier). Let the radius of the Earth be $r$.

Then the angle $\theta$ subtended by the arc $CP$ at the centre of the Earth is given by $$\theta=\frac{d}{r}.\tag{$\ast$}$$ The "$h$" in the linked picture is given by $h=r-r\cos\theta$. The surface area is $2\pi rh$, which is $$2\pi r^2(1-\cos\theta).\tag{$\ast\ast$}$$ Compute $\theta$ using $(\ast)$, and then use $(\ast\ast)$ to find the surface area.

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    Thank you for the detailed answer. I was missing the (*) equation.2012-04-23
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    Actually this answer is incorrect. _θ_ = (_d_ / _r_), in radians, or _θ_ = (_d_ * 360 / (2 _πr_)), in degrees.2016-02-22
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    Unless, of course, you are speaking in [turns](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_(geometry)) ;)2016-02-24
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    @HansBrende: Thank you. I will look at it again, tomorrow perhaps.2016-02-24
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    @AndréNicolas I thought it might be reasonable to let you know that your answer is mentioned in [this post on meta](http://meta.math.stackexchange.com/questions/22697/best-approach-for-fixing-a-mistake-when-your-edits-are-rejected). (It seems that the OP asks both about a general issue and about this particular instance.)2016-03-01
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    @HansBrende: Thank you for spotting the incorrect $\theta$. Fixed.2016-03-01
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You could look at Spherical Cap for the formula. If you treat the earth as a sphere, the coordinates of the center do not matter, just the radius and the radius of the earth.

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    Thx for the reply, if there would be a distributed solution option I would give the half for u, but since Andrés answer was more detailed...2012-04-23