Search Results for ""
6411 - 6420 of 13134 for gas kinetic theorySearch Results

The involute of the epicycloid x = (a+b)cost-bcos[((a+b)/b)t] (1) y = (a+b)sint-bsin[((a+b)/b)t] (2) is another epicycloid given by x = (a+2b)/a{(a+b)cost+bcos[((a+b)/b)t]} ...
The radial curve of an epicycloid is shown above for an epicycloid with four cusps. Although it is claimed to be a rose curve by Lawrence (1972), it is not.
The epispiral is a plane curve with polar equation r=asec(ntheta). There are n sections if n is odd and 2n if n is even. A slightly more symmetric version considers instead ...
The inverse curve of the epispiral r=asec(ntheta) with inversion center at the origin and inversion radius k is the rose curve r=(kcos(ntheta))/a.
The parametric equations of the evolute of an epitrochoid specified by circle radii a and b with offset h are x = ...
A proof of a formula on limits based on the epsilon-delta definition. An example is the following proof that every linear function f(x)=ax+b (a,b in R,a!=0) is continuous at ...
An equation is a mathematical expression stating that two or more quantities are the same as one another, also called an equality, formula, or identity.
A polygon whose vertex angles are equal (Williams 1979, p. 32).
Line segment ranges and pencils which have equal cross ratios are said to be equicross.
There are two similar but distinct concepts related to equidecomposability: "equidecomposable" and "equidecomposable by dissection." The difference is in that the pieces ...

...