SEARCH...:


recently watched....:
  • Radius [en]
  • 吉本昌弘 [ja]
  • 1809 [ksh]
  • Specioal:Categorien [vls]
  • 1808 [ksh]
  • 1807 [ksh]
  • Provinces and territories of Canada [en]
  • いい加減にします! [ja]
  • Jan Wałach [pl]
  • Kehl [en]
  • 632 [eo]

  • jetzt mitverdienen


    Der freche Erotikshop!
    02 Logo 120x60

    Party Explosion - Click here!
    Final Fantasy III DS game

    Miller Brothers, Click here!
    www.easycar.com
    Estate
    Win a Supercar of your dreams........make Summer special this year

    00003 ORION - Logo
    Fancy a hot adventure? More fun for HIM and HER – Shopping at PABO.com!

    LANGUAGE: ar | id | bg | ca | ceb | cs | da | de | et | en / / | es | eo | fr | gr | he | hr it | ko | lt | hu | nl | ja | no | pl | pt | ru | ro | sk | sl | sr | fi | sv | te | tr | uk | zh

    Radius

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search
    Circle illustration

    In classical geometry, a radius (plural: radii) of a circle or sphere is any line segment from its center to its perimeter. By extension, the radius of a circle or sphere is the length of any such segment, which is half the diameter.

    More generally — in geometry, science, engineering, and many other contexts — the radius of something (e.g., a cylinder, a polygon, a mechanical part, or a galaxy) usually refers to the distance from its center or axis of symmetry to its outermost points. If the object does not have an obvious center, the term may refer to its circumradius, the radius of its circumscribed circle or circumscribed sphere. In either case, the radius may be more than half the diameter (which is usually defined as the maximum distance between any two points of the figure).

    The radius of a regular polygon (or polyhedron) is the distance from its center to any of its vertices; which is also its circumradius.

    In graph theory, the radius of a graph is the minimum over all vertices u of the maximum distance from u to any other vertex of the graph.

    [edit] Formulas

    To compute the radius of a circle going through three points P1,P2,P3, the following formula can be used:

    r=\frac{|P_1-P_3|}{2\sin\theta}

    where θ is the angle  \angle P_1 P_2 P_3.

    The circumference of a circle is 2π times its radius.

    [edit] See also

    Change language: All | الرربية | Bahasa Indonesia | Български | Català | Cebuano | Ħesky | Dansk | Deutsch | Eesti | English | Español | Esperanto | Français | עברית | Hrvatski | Italiano | 핶국어 | Lietuvių | Magyar | Nederlands | 旡涬語 | Norsk (bokmál) | Polski | Português | Русскиб | Română | Slovenčina | Slovenščina | Српски / Srpski | Suomi | Svenska | తెలుగు | Türkçe | УкраїнсѦка | 中文

    Autorem skryptu AdWiki v0.8 (2007) jest husky83
    Wikipedia jest zarejestrowanym znakiem towarowym Wikimedia Foundation
    Wszystkie materiały pochodzą z Wikipedii, obięte są licencją GNU Free Documentation License