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  2. 4D printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4D_printing

    Stereolithography is a 3D-printing technique that uses photopolymerization to bind substrate that has been laid layer upon layer, creating a polymeric network. As opposed to fused-deposition modeling, where the extruded material hardens immediately to form layers, 4D printing is fundamentally based in stereolithography, where in most cases ultraviolet light is used to cure the layered ...

  3. Four-dimensional product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-dimensional_product

    A four-dimensional product (4D product) considers a physical product as a life-like entity capable of changing form and physical properties autonomously over time. It is an evolving field of product design practice and research linked to similar concepts at the material scale (programmable matter and four-dimensional printing), however, typically utilizes sensors and actuators in order to ...

  4. Rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotations_in_4-dimensional...

    This implies that S 3 L × S 3 R is the universal covering group of SO(4) — its unique double cover — and that S 3 L and S 3 R are normal subgroups of SO(4). The identity rotation I and the central inversion −I form a group C 2 of order 2, which is the centre of SO(4) and of both S 3 L and S 3 R. The centre of a group is a normal subgroup ...

  5. 4th Dimension (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4th_Dimension_(software)

    4D (4th Dimension, or Silver Surfer, as it was known during early development) is a relational database management system and integrated development environment developed by Laurent Ribardière. [3] 4D was created in 1984 [4] and had a slightly delayed public release for Macintosh in 1987 [5] [6] [7] with its own programming language. [1]

  6. Four-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-dimensional_space

    Four-dimensional space (4D) is the mathematical extension of the concept of three-dimensional space (3D). Three-dimensional space is the simplest possible abstraction of the observation that one needs only three numbers, called dimensions , to describe the sizes or locations of objects in the everyday world.

  7. Regular 4-polytope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_4-polytope

    The tesseract is one of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes. In mathematics, a regular 4-polytope or regular polychoron is a regular four-dimensional polytope.They are the four-dimensional analogues of the regular polyhedra in three dimensions and the regular polygons in two dimensions.

  8. TRS-80 Model 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRS-80_Model_4

    The Model III LDOS 5.1.4 was also updated to version 5.3, supporting the same feature set as LS-DOS 6.3. [29] The Model 4D is the last computer descended from Radio Shack's original Model I from 1977 but it is not branded as a Radio Shack product. The badge mounted on its front cover brands it as the "Tandy TRS-80 Model 4D".

  9. Tesseract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesseract

    The Dalí cross, a net of a tesseract The tesseract can be unfolded into eight cubes into 3D space, just as the cube can be unfolded into six squares into 2D space.. In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. [1]