Elements of Geometry and TrigonometryWiley & Long, 1836 - 359 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 15
Side 166
... cone ; the hypothenuse SB describes the convex surface of the cone . The point S is named the vertex of the cone , SA the axis or the altitude , and SB the side or the apothem . Every section HKFI , at right angles to the axis , is a ...
... cone ; the hypothenuse SB describes the convex surface of the cone . The point S is named the vertex of the cone , SA the axis or the altitude , and SB the side or the apothem . Every section HKFI , at right angles to the axis , is a ...
Side 167
... cone , any polygon ABCDE be inscribed , and from the vertices A , B , C , D , E , lines be drawn to S , the vertex of the cone , these lines may be regarded as the sides of a pyramid whose base is the polygon ABCDE and vertex S. The ...
... cone , any polygon ABCDE be inscribed , and from the vertices A , B , C , D , E , lines be drawn to S , the vertex of the cone , these lines may be regarded as the sides of a pyramid whose base is the polygon ABCDE and vertex S. The ...
Side 168
... form the bases of the zone or segment . Note . The Cylinder , the Cone , and the Sphere , are the three round bodies treated of in the Elements of Geometry . PROPOSITION I. THEOREM . The convex surface of a cylinder 168 GEOMETRY .
... form the bases of the zone or segment . Note . The Cylinder , the Cone , and the Sphere , are the three round bodies treated of in the Elements of Geometry . PROPOSITION I. THEOREM . The convex surface of a cylinder 168 GEOMETRY .
Side 171
... cone is equal to the circumference of its base , multiplied by half its side . Let the circle ABCD be the base of a cone , S the vertex , SO the altitude , and SA the side then will its convex sur- face be equal to circ . OA X SA . For ...
... cone is equal to the circumference of its base , multiplied by half its side . Let the circle ABCD be the base of a cone , S the vertex , SO the altitude , and SA the side then will its convex sur- face be equal to circ . OA X SA . For ...
Side 172
... cone : then will its convex surface be equal to AD × ( circ.OA + circ.CD ) 2 For , inscribe in the bases of the frustums two regular polygons of the same number of sides , and having their homologous sides parallel , each to each . The ...
... cone : then will its convex surface be equal to AD × ( circ.OA + circ.CD ) 2 For , inscribe in the bases of the frustums two regular polygons of the same number of sides , and having their homologous sides parallel , each to each . The ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
adjacent altitude angle ACB ar.-comp base multiplied bisect Book VII centre chord circ circumference circumscribed common cone consequently convex surface cosine Cotang cylinder diagonal diameter dicular distance divided draw drawn equally distant equations equivalent feet figure find the area formed four right angles frustum given angle given line greater homologous sides hypothenuse inscribed circle inscribed polygon intersection less Let ABC logarithm measured by half number of sides opposite parallelogram parallelopipedon pendicular perimeter perpen perpendicular perpendicular let fall plane MN polyedron polygon ABCDE PROBLEM PROPOSITION pyramid quadrant quadrilateral quantities radii radius ratio rectangle regular polygon right angled triangle S-ABCDE Scholium secant segment side BC similar sine slant height solid angle solid described sphere spherical polygon spherical triangle square described straight line tang tangent THEOREM triangle ABC triangular prism vertex
Populære avsnitt
Side 241 - In every plane triangle, the sum of two sides is to their difference as the tangent of half the sum of the angles opposite those sides is to the tangent of half their difference.
Side 18 - If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the...
Side 233 - It is, indeed, evident, that the negative characteristic will always be one greater than the number of ciphers between the decimal point and the first significant figure.
Side 168 - The radius of a sphere is a straight line drawn from the centre to any point of the surface ; the diameter or axis is a line passing through this centre, and terminated on both sides by the surface.
Side 18 - America, but know that we are alive, that two and two make four, and that the sum of any two sides of a triangle is greater than the third side.
Side 225 - B) = cos A cos B — sin A sin B, (6a) cos (A — B) = cos A cos B + sin A sin B...
Side 20 - In an isosceles triangle the angles opposite the equal sides are equal.
Side 86 - The areas of two triangles which have an angle of the one equal to an angle of the other are to each other as the products of the sides including the equal angles. A D A' Hyp. In triangles ABC and A'B'C', To prove AABC A A'B'C' A'B' x A'C ' Proof. Draw the altitudes BD and B'D'.
Side 159 - S-o6c be the smaller : and suppose Aa to be the altitude of a prism, which having ABC for its base, is equal to their difference. Divide the altitude AT into equal parts Ax, xy, yz, &c. each less than Aa, and let k be one of those parts ; through the points of division...
Side 168 - CIRCLE is a plane figure bounded by a curved line, all the points of which are equally distant from a point within called the centre; as the figure ADB E.