rising curve - translation to german
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rising curve - translation to german

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Rising (album); Rising (disambiguation); Rising (surname)

rising curve      
ansteigende Kurve
J curve         
  • NARDL (Cumulative Dynamic) Multiplier effect of real effective exchange rate and response of US trade balance
  • An example J curve. Trade starts in perfect balance, but depreciation at time 0 causes an immediate trade deficit of 50 million dollars. The balance of trade improves over time as consumers react, returning to balance at month 3 and rising to a surplus of 150 million at month 4.
THE TIME PATH OF A COUNTRY’S TRADE BALANCE FOLLOWING A DEVALUATION OR DEPRECIATION OF ITS CURRENCY, UNDER A CERTAIN SET OF ASSUMPTIONS
J Curve; J-curve; J curve (private equity); J-Curve theory; J-curve theory; J curve theory; J-cuve; J frequency distribution curve; J-Curve Effect; J-curve effect; J Curve Effect; J curve effect; J-Curve; J-shaped growth curve; J-shaped curve
n. J Kurve, Kurve die das Verhältnis zwischen dem Export und den Währungswert angibt (Wirtschaft)
Bezier curve         
  • Animation of the construction of a fifth-order Bézier curve
  • cyan: ''y'' {{=}} ''t''<sup>3</sup>}}.
  • Abstract composition of cubic Bézier curves ray-traced in 3D. Ray intersection with swept volumes along curves is calculated with Phantom Ray-Hair Intersector algorithm.<ref>Alexander Reshetov and David Luebke, Phantom Ray-Hair Intersector. In Proceedings of the ACM on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques (August 1, 2018). [https://research.nvidia.com/publication/2018-08_Phantom-Ray-Hair-Intersector]</ref>
  • Animation of a linear Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Animation of a quadratic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a quadratic Bézier curve
  • Animation of a cubic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a cubic Bézier curve
  • Animation of a quartic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a quartic Bézier curve
  • Quadratic Béziers in [[string art]]: The end points ('''&bull;''') and control point ('''&times;''') define the quadratic Bézier curve ('''⋯''').
CURVE USED IN COMPUTER GRAPHICS AND RELATED FIELDS
Bezier curve; Bezier curves; Bézier Curve; Bernstein-Bézier curve; Bernstein-Bezier curve; Besier curve; Bezier cubic; Bézier cubic; Bezier splines; Bezier Curve; Cubic bezier; Conic Bezier curve; Conic Bézier curve; Bezier path; Cubic bézier curve; Cubic Bézier curve
Bezier Kurve, eine Kurve die durch eine besondere mathematische Methode entsteht

Definition

Bezier curve
<graphics> A type of curve defined by mathematical formulae, used in computer graphics. A curve with coordinates P(u), where u varies from 0 at one end of the curve to 1 at the other, is defined by a set of n+1 "control points" (X(i), Y(i), Z(i)) for i = 0 to n. P(u) = Sum i=0..n [(X(i), Y(i), Z(i)) * B(i, n, u)] B(i, n, u) = C(n, i) * u^i * (1-u)^(n-i) C(n, i) = n!/i!/(n-i)! A Bezier curve (or surface) is defined by its control points, which makes it invariant under any affine mapping (translation, rotation, parallel projection), and thus even under a change in the axis system. You need only to transform the control points and then compute the new curve. The control polygon defined by the points is itself affine invariant. Bezier curves also have the variation-diminishing property. This makes them easier to split compared to other types of curve such as Hermite or B-spline. Other important properties are multiple values, global and local control, versatility, and order of continuity. [What do these properties mean?] (1996-06-12)

Wikipedia

Rising

Rising may refer to:

  • Rising, a stage in baking - see Proofing (baking technique)
  • Elevation
  • Short for Uprising, a rebellion
Examples of use of rising curve
1. Mike Warburton, senior tax partner at Grant Thornton, said: "It is an inevitable and sharply rising curve because the thresholds have been going up less than asset values have increased.
2. The answer is that the Turner report would not just initiate a rising curve of public spending on pensions, but by doing so would affect spending in many other areas – for decades.
3. Tower Hamlets may be on a rising curve, but two–fifths of its housing stock is owned by the council and another 30 per cent is rented by private or housing association landlords.