enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cavalieri's quadrature formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalieri's_quadrature_formula

    The term "quadrature" is a traditional term for area; the integral is geometrically interpreted as the area under the curve y = x n. Traditionally important cases are y = x 2 , the quadrature of the parabola , known in antiquity, and y = 1/ x , the quadrature of the hyperbola , whose value is a logarithm .

  3. Polar coordinate system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_coordinate_system

    In mathematics, the polar coordinate system specifies a given point in a plane by using a distance and an angle as its two coordinates. These are the point's distance from a reference point called the pole, and; the point's direction from the pole relative to the direction of the polar axis, a ray drawn from the pole.

  4. Contact (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_(mathematics)

    Two curves in the plane intersecting at a point p are said to have: 0th-order contact if the curves have a simple crossing (not tangent). 1st-order contact if the two curves are tangent. 2nd-order contact if the curvatures of the curves are equal. Such curves are said to be osculating. 3rd-order contact if the derivatives of the curvature are ...

  5. Tractrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tractrix

    The area between the tractrix and its asymptote is ⁠ π a 2 / 2 ⁠, which can be found using integration or Mamikon's theorem. The envelope of the normals of the tractrix (that is, the evolute of the tractrix) is the catenary (or chain curve ) given by y = a cosh ⁠ x / a ⁠ .

  6. Bipolar coordinates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipolar_coordinates

    The equations for x and y can be combined to give + = ⁡ (+) [2] [3] or + = ⁡ (). This equation shows that σ and τ are the real and imaginary parts of an analytic function of x+iy (with logarithmic branch points at the foci), which in turn proves (by appeal to the general theory of conformal mapping) (the Cauchy-Riemann equations) that these particular curves of σ and τ intersect at ...

  7. Fermat's spiral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermat's_spiral

    Let φ 1 = 0, φ 2 = 2π; then the area of the black region (see diagram) is A 0 = a 2 π 2, which is half of the area of the circle K 0 with radius r(2π). The regions between neighboring curves (white, blue, yellow) have the same area A = 2a 2 π 2. Hence: The area between two arcs of the spiral after a full turn equals the area of the circle ...

  8. Pick's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pick's_theorem

    Farey sunburst of order 6, with 1 interior (red) and 96 boundary (green) points giving an area of 1 + ⁠ 96 / 2 ⁠ − 1 = 48 [1]. In geometry, Pick's theorem provides a formula for the area of a simple polygon with integer vertex coordinates, in terms of the number of integer points within it and on its boundary.

  9. Polar curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_curve

    The p-th polar of a C for a natural number p is defined as Δ Q p f(x, y, z) = 0. This is a curve of degree n−p. When p is n−1 the p-th polar is a line called the polar line of C with respect to Q. Similarly, when p is n−2 the curve is called the polar conic of C.