hyperboloid paraboloid - определение. Что такое hyperboloid paraboloid
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Что (кто) такое hyperboloid paraboloid - определение

QUADRIC SURFACE OF SPECIAL KIND
Paraboloid of revolution; Hyperbolic paraboloid; Circular paraboloid; Elliptic paraboloid; Hypar; Parabolloid; Elliptic Paraboloid; Pringle shape; Paraboloids
  • A hyperbolic paraboloid with lines contained in it
  • A hyperbolic paraboloid with hyperbolas and parabolas
  • elliptic paraboloid, parabolic cylinder, hyperbolic paraboloid
  • [[Polygon mesh]] of a circular paraboloid
  • Circular paraboloid
  • [[Pringles]] fried snacks are in the shape of a hyperbolic paraboloid.
Найдено результатов: 22
hyperboloid         
  • Animation of a hyperboloid of revolution
  • 160px
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: generation by a rotating hyperbola (top) and line (bottom: red or blue)
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: generation by rotating a hyperbola
  • 150px
  • Shukhov]] hyperboloid tower (1898) in [[Vyksa]], Russia
TYPE OF SURFACE IN THREE DIMENSIONS
Hyperboloid of one sheet; Hyperboloid of two sheets; Hyperboloid of revolution; One-sheet hyperboloid; One-sheeted hyperboloid; Two-sheet hyperboloid; Two-Sheeted Hyperboloid; Two-sheeted hyperboloid; Elliptic hyperboloid; Elliptical hyperboloid; Hyperboloids
[h??'p?:b?l??d]
¦ noun a solid or surface having plane sections that are hyperbolas, ellipses, or circles.
Derivatives
hyperboloidal adjective
Hyperboloid         
  • Animation of a hyperboloid of revolution
  • 160px
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: generation by a rotating hyperbola (top) and line (bottom: red or blue)
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: generation by rotating a hyperbola
  • 150px
  • Shukhov]] hyperboloid tower (1898) in [[Vyksa]], Russia
TYPE OF SURFACE IN THREE DIMENSIONS
Hyperboloid of one sheet; Hyperboloid of two sheets; Hyperboloid of revolution; One-sheet hyperboloid; One-sheeted hyperboloid; Two-sheet hyperboloid; Two-Sheeted Hyperboloid; Two-sheeted hyperboloid; Elliptic hyperboloid; Elliptical hyperboloid; Hyperboloids
·adj Having some property that belongs to an hyperboloid or hyperbola.
II. Hyperboloid ·noun A surface of the second order, which is cut by certain planes in hyperbolas; also, the solid, bounded in part by such a surface.
Hyperboloid         
  • Animation of a hyperboloid of revolution
  • 160px
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: plane sections
  • hyperboloid of one sheet: generation by a rotating hyperbola (top) and line (bottom: red or blue)
  • hyperboloid of two sheets: generation by rotating a hyperbola
  • 150px
  • Shukhov]] hyperboloid tower (1898) in [[Vyksa]], Russia
TYPE OF SURFACE IN THREE DIMENSIONS
Hyperboloid of one sheet; Hyperboloid of two sheets; Hyperboloid of revolution; One-sheet hyperboloid; One-sheeted hyperboloid; Two-sheet hyperboloid; Two-Sheeted Hyperboloid; Two-sheeted hyperboloid; Elliptic hyperboloid; Elliptical hyperboloid; Hyperboloids
In geometry, a hyperboloid of revolution, sometimes called a circular hyperboloid, is the surface generated by rotating a hyperbola around one of its principal axes. A hyperboloid is the surface obtained from a hyperboloid of revolution by deforming it by means of directional scalings, or more generally, of an affine transformation.
Paraboloid         
·noun The solid generated by the rotation of a parabola about its axis; any surface of the second order whose sections by planes parallel to a given line are parabolas.
paraboloid         
[p?'rab(?)l??d]
¦ noun
1. a solid generated by rotating a parabola about its axis of symmetry.
2. a solid with two or more non-parallel parabolic cross sections.
Derivatives
paraboloidal adjective
Hyperboloid model         
  • Animation of partial {7,3} hyperbolic tiling of the hyperboloid rotated into the Poincare perspective.
MODEL OF N-DIMENSIONAL HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY
Minkowski model; Minkowski hyperboloid
In geometry, the hyperboloid model, also known as the Minkowski model after Hermann Minkowski, is a model of n-dimensional hyperbolic geometry in which points are represented by points on the forward sheet S+ of a two-sheeted hyperboloid in (n+1)-dimensional Minkowski space or by the displacement vectors from the origin to those points, and m-planes are represented by the intersections of (m+1)-planes passing through the origin in Minkowski space with S+ or by wedge products of m vectors. Hyperbolic space is embedded isometrically in Minkowski space; that is, the hyperbolic distance function is inherited from Minkowski space, analogous to the way spherical distance is inherited from Euclidean distance when the n-sphere is embedded in (n+1)-dimensional Euclidean space.
The Garin Death Ray         
NOVEL BY ALEKSEY NIKOLAYEVICH TOLSTOY
Engineer Garin's Hyperboloid; Engineer Garin's Death Ray; Hyperboloid of Engineer Garin; The Hyperboloid of Engineer Garin
The Garin Death Ray also known as The Death Box and The Hyperboloid of Engineer Garin () is a science fiction novel by the noted Russian author Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy written in 1926–1927. Vladimir Nabokov, who included parodic elements in his tragicomedy The Waltz Invention (1938), considered it Tolstoy's finest fictional work.
Parabolic Reflector         
  • newspaper=ESO Announcement}}</ref>
  • Lighting the Olympic Flame with a parabolic reflector
  • Parallel rays coming into a parabolic mirror are focused at a point F. The vertex is V, and the axis of symmetry passes through V and F. For off-axis reflectors (with just the part of the paraboloid between the points P<sub>1</sub> and P<sub>3</sub>), the receiver is still placed at the focus of the paraboloid, but it does not cast a shadow onto the reflector.
REFLECTOR / COLLECTOR THAT HAS THE SHAPE OF A PARABOLOID
Parabolic dish; Parabolic mirror; Paraboloid reflector; Parabolic mirror wok; Parabolic reflectors; Parabolic mirrors; Solar parabolic dish; Mirascope; Paraboloidal reflector; Parabolic Reflector
A reflector for a light, a paraboloid or surface of revolution whose section is a parabola. A light placed at its focus has its rays reflected parallel to each other. Examples of parabolic reflectors are seen in electric search lights and in locomotive head-lights. They are employed in electric search lights. The arc light must be of such construction as to maintain its ignited points always at the same point, the focus of the paraboloid.
Shukhov Tower in Polibino         
  • The world's first [[hyperboloid structure]] in Polibino, 2009
HYPERBOLOID TOWER IN LIPETSK OBLAST, RUSSIA
World's First Hyperboloid structure; Shukhov tower in Polibino; World's first hyperboloid structure
The Shukhov Tower in Polibino is the world's first diagrid hyperboloid structure designed in 1896 by Russian engineer and architect Vladimir Shukhov.pp.
dome         
  • Apache wigwam, by Edward S. Curtis, 1903
  • Comparison of a generic "true" [[arch]] (left) and a corbel arch (right)
  • Saint Sava]] was entirely built from prefabricated slabs. It was hydraulically lifted from the ground to 40 m height by lift-slab method. 1935-2004
  • Dome of the Church of the Assumption in [[Carcaixent]]
  • The [[Dome of the Rock]] in [[Jerusalem]]
  • [[Geodesic dome]]s of the [[Eden Project]] in United Kingdom
  • Pantheon]] in Rome.
  • Lei Cheng Uk Han Tomb]] (25 AD – 220 AD).
  • Cathedral of the Annunciation]], [[Moscow Kremlin]].
  • Blue Mosque]] in Istanbul, a World Heritage Site and example of the classical style period of Ottoman architecture, showing Byzantine influence.
  • stellate]] pattern to represent the night sky.
  • Brunelleschi]]'s dome, Italy
  • Selimiye Mosque dome in Edirne, Turkey
  • Sheikh Lotfallah Mosque, [[Isfahan]], [[Iran]].
  • The dome of [[St Paul's Cathedral]] in London
  • The [[Taj Mahal]] in [[Agra]], [[India]] built by [[Shah Jahan]].
  • Justinian the Great]] was the largest cathedral in the world for nearly a thousand years.
  • [[Saint Basil's Cathedral]] (1555–61) in [[Moscow]], [[Russia]]. Its distinctive [[onion dome]]s date to the 1680s.
ARCHITECTURAL ELEMENT THAT RESEMBLES THE HOLLOW UPPER HALF OF A SPHERE
Domes; Saucer dome; Handkerchief vault; Sail vault; Domal; Sail-vault; Calotte (architecture); False dome; Umbrella dome; Paraboloid dome; Compound dome
your head, above the face.
John just got mugged! They slapped a lead pipe against his dome!

Википедия

Paraboloid

In geometry, a paraboloid is a quadric surface that has exactly one axis of symmetry and no center of symmetry. The term "paraboloid" is derived from parabola, which refers to a conic section that has a similar property of symmetry.

Every plane section of a paraboloid by a plane parallel to the axis of symmetry is a parabola. The paraboloid is hyperbolic if every other plane section is either a hyperbola, or two crossing lines (in the case of a section by a tangent plane). The paraboloid is elliptic if every other nonempty plane section is either an ellipse, or a single point (in the case of a section by a tangent plane). A paraboloid is either elliptic or hyperbolic.

Equivalently, a paraboloid may be defined as a quadric surface that is not a cylinder, and has an implicit equation whose part of degree two may be factored over the complex numbers into two different linear factors. The paraboloid is hyperbolic if the factors are real; elliptic if the factors are complex conjugate.

An elliptic paraboloid is shaped like an oval cup and has a maximum or minimum point when its axis is vertical. In a suitable coordinate system with three axes x, y, and z, it can be represented by the equation

z = x 2 a 2 + y 2 b 2 . {\displaystyle z={\frac {x^{2}}{a^{2}}}+{\frac {y^{2}}{b^{2}}}.}

where a and b are constants that dictate the level of curvature in the xz and yz planes respectively. In this position, the elliptic paraboloid opens upward.

A hyperbolic paraboloid (not to be confused with a hyperboloid) is a doubly ruled surface shaped like a saddle. In a suitable coordinate system, a hyperbolic paraboloid can be represented by the equation

z = y 2 b 2 x 2 a 2 . {\displaystyle z={\frac {y^{2}}{b^{2}}}-{\frac {x^{2}}{a^{2}}}.}

In this position, the hyperbolic paraboloid opens downward along the x-axis and upward along the y-axis (that is, the parabola in the plane x = 0 opens upward and the parabola in the plane y = 0 opens downward).

Any paraboloid (elliptic or hyperbolic) is a translation surface, as it can be generated by a moving parabola directed by a second parabola.