quadric cylinder - definition. What is quadric cylinder
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

LOCUS OF ZEROS OF A QUADRATIC POLYNOMIAL (AFFINE OR PROJECTIVE, NOT NECESSARILY REAL)
Quadric surface; Quadric (projective geometry); Quadric (Projective Geometry); Quadratic surface; Quadric hypersurface; Hyperbolic quadric; Quadric cone; Quadratic hypersurface; Quadrics

Single-cylinder engine         
  •  [[DKW]] RT 250 (1952–1953) motorcycle engine
  • Villiers]] engine in a 1959 [[Bond Minicar]]
  • Yamaha SRX600]] (1985–1997) motorcycle engine
PISTON ENGINE WITH ONE CYLINDER
Single cylinder; Single-cylinder; One-cylinder engine; One cylinder engine; 1 cylinder; Single cylinder engine
A single-cylinder engine, sometimes called a thumper, is a piston engine with one cylinder. This engine is often used for motorcycles, motor scooters, go-karts, all-terrain vehicles, radio-controlled vehicles, portable tools and garden machinery (such as lawnmowers, cultivators, and string trimmers).
Quadric         
·adj Of or pertaining to the second degree.
II. Quadric ·noun A quantic of the second degree. ·see Quantic.
III. Quadric ·noun A surface whose equation in three variables is of the second degree. Spheres, spheroids, ellipsoids, paraboloids, hyperboloids, also cones and cylinders with circular bases, are quadrics.
quadric         
['kw?dr?k]
¦ adjective Geometry denoting a surface or curve described by an equation of the second degree.
Origin
C19: from L. quadra 'square' + -ic.

ويكيبيديا

Quadric

In mathematics, a quadric or quadric surface (quadric hypersurface in higher dimensions), is a generalization of conic sections (ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas). It is a hypersurface (of dimension D) in a (D + 1)-dimensional space, and it is defined as the zero set of an irreducible polynomial of degree two in D + 1 variables; for example, D = 1 in the case of conic sections. When the defining polynomial is not absolutely irreducible, the zero set is generally not considered a quadric, although it is often called a degenerate quadric or a reducible quadric.

In coordinates x1, x2, ..., xD+1, the general quadric is thus defined by the algebraic equation

i , j = 1 D + 1 x i Q i j x j + i = 1 D + 1 P i x i + R = 0 {\displaystyle \sum _{i,j=1}^{D+1}x_{i}Q_{ij}x_{j}+\sum _{i=1}^{D+1}P_{i}x_{i}+R=0}

which may be compactly written in vector and matrix notation as:

x Q x T + P x T + R = 0 {\displaystyle xQx^{\mathrm {T} }+Px^{\mathrm {T} }+R=0\,}

where x = (x1, x2, ..., xD+1) is a row vector, xT is the transpose of x (a column vector), Q is a (D + 1) × (D + 1) matrix and P is a (D + 1)-dimensional row vector and R a scalar constant. The values Q, P and R are often taken to be over real numbers or complex numbers, but a quadric may be defined over any field.

A quadric is an affine algebraic variety, or, if it is reducible, an affine algebraic set. Quadrics may also be defined in projective spaces; see § Normal form of projective quadrics, below.