involute work - ορισμός. Τι είναι το involute work
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Τι (ποιος) είναι involute work - ορισμός

MATHEMATICAL CURVE CONSTRUCTED FROM ANOTHER CURVE
Evolvent; Involute of a circle; Involute of a Circle
  • Involutes of a circle
  • Involutes of a semicubic parabola (blue). Only the red curve is a parabola. Notice how the involutes and tangents make up an orthogonal coordinate system. This is a general fact.
  • Two involutes (red) of a parabola
  • Involutes of a cycloid (blue): Only the red curve is another cycloid
  • Involute: properties. The angles depicted are 90 degrees.
  • The red involute of a catenary (blue) is a tractrix.

Work (thermodynamics)         
  • Joule's apparatus for measuring the [[mechanical equivalent of heat]]
ENERGY TRANSFER, OR ITS AMOUNT (& DIRECTION), IN A THERMODYNAMIC PROCESS DUE TO MACROSCOPIC FACTORS EXTERNAL TO A THERMODYNAMIC SYSTEM
Work (Thermodynamics); Thermodynamic work; PV work; Pressure-volume work; Pressure volume work; Thermodynamical work
In thermodynamics, work performed by a system is energy transferred by the system to its surroundings, by a mechanism through which the system can spontaneously exert macroscopic forces on its surroundings. In the surroundings, through suitable passive linkages, the work can lift a weight, for example.
Work (physics)         
  • Forces in springs assembled in parallel
  • Gravity racing championship in Campos Novos, Santa Catarina, Brazil, 8 September 2010
  • Lotus type 119B gravity racer at Lotus 60th celebration
  • 1=''W'' = ''mgh''}} along any descending path
  • A force of constant magnitude and perpendicular to the lever arm
ENERGY TRANSFERRED TO AN OBJECT VIA THE APPLICATION OF FORCE ON IT THROUGH A DISPLACEMENT
Work (Physics); Work done; Work physics; Work (Mechanics); Work (mechanics); Work energy theorem; Work-energy theorem; Work-kinetic energy theorem; Work kinetic energy theorem; W=fd; Physics work; Rotational work; Mechanical work; Work–energy theorem; Work–energy principle; Work (physcis); Work-energy principle
In physics, work is the energy transferred to or from an object via the application of force along a displacement. In its simplest form, it is often represented as the product of force and displacement.
involute         
['?nv?l(j)u:t]
¦ adjective
1. formal complicated.
2. technical curled spirally.
Zoology (of a shell) having the whorls wound closely round the axis.
Botany rolled inwards at the edges.
¦ noun Geometry the locus of a point considered as the end of a taut string being unwound from a given curve in the plane of that curve. Compare with evolute.
Origin
C17: from L. involutus, past participle of involvere (see involve).

Βικιπαίδεια

Involute

In mathematics, an involute (also known as an evolvent) is a particular type of curve that is dependent on another shape or curve. An involute of a curve is the locus of a point on a piece of taut string as the string is either unwrapped from or wrapped around the curve.

The evolute of an involute is the original curve.

It is generalized by the roulette family of curves. That is, the involutes of a curve are the roulettes of the curve generated by a straight line.

The notions of the involute and evolute of a curve were introduced by Christiaan Huygens in his work titled Horologium oscillatorium sive de motu pendulorum ad horologia aptato demonstrationes geometricae (1673), where he showed that the involute of a cycloid is still a cycloid, thus providing a method for constructing the cycloidal pendulum, which has the useful property that its period is independent of the amplitude of oscillation.