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The angular acceleration alpha is defined as the time derivative of the angular velocity omega, alpha=(domega)/(dt)=(d^2theta)/(dt^2)z^^=(a)/r.
The angular distance traveled around a circle is the number of radians the path subtends, theta=l/(2pir)2pi=l/r.
Two points are antipodal (i.e., each is the antipode of the other) if they are diametrically opposite. Examples include endpoints of a line segment, or poles of a sphere. ...
A directed graph is called an arborescence if, from a given node x known as the root vertex, there is exactly one elementary path from x to every other node y.
The three circular triangles A^'B^'C^', AB^'C^', A^'BC^', and A^'B^'C obtained by extending the arcs of a circular triangle ABC into complete circles.
An augmented polyhedron is a polyhedron formed from a base polyhedron via the augmentation operation on one or more of its faces. Augmentation is implemented under the ...
"Aut" is the term applied in propositional calculus to the XOR connective. "Aut" is Latin form for "either/or (but not both)," e.g., "Aut Caesar aut nihil" (Cesare Borgia; ...
Axiomatic set theory is a version of set theory in which axioms are taken as uninterpreted rather than as formalizations of pre-existing truths.
A line that simultaneously bisects a triangle's perimeter and area.
All triangles are bicentric, i.e., possess both an incircle and a circumcircle. This is not necessarily the case for polygons with four or more sides. The inradius r and ...
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