What version? What article? Why WP?
Dr.Brain said:
Ok I read the wikipedia description of Quadropole as w.r.t Gravitational Wave emission , so what I infer is that , there is no dipole existing because m>0 , which is possible in case of magnets and charges.
It says a spheroid (ellipse rotated 360) , will possesses a quadropole , how is that? ...whereas a perfect spherical planet will not ...!...so will the planet form a monopole ...what in the case of binary star systems , because they emit GW's , so do two stars orbitting each other form a quadropole?...can I have a more detailed desciption for quadropole's in case os system's emitting GWs.
Gosh, what version of what WP article are you reading? I can't seem to find the text you "quoted" (yes?), not even searching wikipedia.org for the words you used via Google!
Note that there are many ways in which the words "monopole, dipole, quadrupole, ... multipole" are used in statistics, math, and physics. They really are closely related but this might not be obvious. The key feature which all multipole expansions have in common is that they are describing deviations from the most symmetric form, via a kind of generalized power series analogous to a_0 + a_1/r + a_2/r^2 ... where r is something like distance from a "center of mass". This might at least help you to understand why a perfectly spherically symmetric gravitational field has a multipole expansion which terminates with the "monopole term". Higher order multipoles, if they exist, would describe how the field deviates from being spherically symmetric.
BTW, whenever you cite a WP article, you should first hit the "permanent link" button in the WP sidebar (look to the left) and then copy and paste the complete url this actions gives you. This ensures that even years later, someone reading PF will know what version of what article you were discussing. This is important because WP articles are so unstable.
In a very recent thread, I pointed out in response to a similar question that recent versions of the WP article titled "Gravitational radiation", in the section titled "Source of gravititational waves", are seriously misleading. This was frustating for me because months ago I noticed that this section contained many serious errors and was very badly written, so I rewrote that section. Unfortunately, more recent (and probably well intentioned) editors have once again munged it, so that recent versions are again misleading, which leads (apparently) to confusion on the part of readers like yourself.
If this is the WP article you are quoting from, try the earlier version listed at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Hillman/Archive (scroll down to "Gravitational radiation" and click on the link).
(Just took a look and the current versions (22 Dec 2006) of the WP articles on "Multipole moments", "Dipole", "Quadrupole", "Gravitational radiation" all contain multiple errors, ranging from silly mistatements to seriously misleading misinformation.)
Even better, I hope you will consider checking out of your local university library a copy of one of the excellent gtr textbooks listed at http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/RelWWW/reading.html#gtr