geometrically ruled - definitie. Wat is geometrically ruled
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Wat (wie) is geometrically ruled - definitie

SURFACE THROUGH EVERY POINT OF WHICH RUNS A STRAIGHT LINE WHICH EQUALLY IS ON THE SURFACE
Doubly ruled; Doubly ruled surface; Doubly Ruled Surface; Ruled Surface; Doubly-ruled surface; Ruled algebraic surface; Ruling of a cone
  • Ruled surface generated by two [[Bézier curve]]s as directrices (red, green)
  • Definition of a ruled surface: every point lies on a line
  • Hyperbolic paraboloid
  • Möbius strip
  • hyperboloid of one sheet for <math>\varphi=63^\circ</math>
  • cylinder, cone
  • Developable connection of two ellipses and its development
  • helicoid

Geometrically (algebraic geometry)         
Draft:Geometrically (algebraic geometry); Geometrically irreducible
In algebraic geometry, especially in scheme theory, a property is said to hold geometrically over a field if it also holds over the algebraic closure of the field. In other words, a property holds geometrically if it holds after a base change to a geometric point.
Ruled surface         
In geometry, a surface is ruled (also called a scroll) if through every point of there is a straight line that lies on . Examples include the plane, the lateral surface of a cylinder or cone, a conical surface with elliptical directrix, the right conoid, the helicoid, and the tangent developable of a smooth curve in space.
Merchant Kings         
2009 NON-FICTION BOOK BY STEPHEN R. BOWN
Merchant Kings: When Companies Ruled the World; Merchant Kings: When Companies Ruled the World, 1600 to 1900
Merchant Kings: When Companies Ruled the World, 1600 to 1900 is a 2009 non-fiction popular history book by Stephen R. Bown, which discusses the age of "heroic commerce" through biographical profiles of six of the leading "merchant kings" of the great chartered companies which held colonial trade monopolies: Jan Pieterszoon Coen of the Dutch East India Company, Pieter Stuyvesant of the Dutch West India Company, Robert Clive of the English East India Company, Alexander Baranov of the Russian American Company, George Simpson of the Hudson's Bay Company, and Cecil John Rhodes of the British South Africa Company.

Wikipedia

Ruled surface

In geometry, a surface S is ruled (also called a scroll) if through every point of S there is a straight line that lies on S. Examples include the plane, the lateral surface of a cylinder or cone, a conical surface with elliptical directrix, the right conoid, the helicoid, and the tangent developable of a smooth curve in space.

A ruled surface can be described as the set of points swept by a moving straight line. For example, a cone is formed by keeping one point of a line fixed whilst moving another point along a circle. A surface is doubly ruled if through every one of its points there are two distinct lines that lie on the surface. The hyperbolic paraboloid and the hyperboloid of one sheet are doubly ruled surfaces. The plane is the only surface which contains at least three distinct lines through each of its points (Fuchs & Tabachnikov 2007).

The properties of being ruled or doubly ruled are preserved by projective maps, and therefore are concepts of projective geometry. In algebraic geometry, ruled surfaces are sometimes considered to be surfaces in affine or projective space over a field, but they are also sometimes considered as abstract algebraic surfaces without an embedding into affine or projective space, in which case "straight line" is understood to mean an affine or projective line.