Elements of Geometry and Trigonometry |
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Page 4
... polygon and circle may be made to coincide so nearly , as to differ from each other by less than any assignable quantity , has been taken from the Edinburgh Encyclopedia . It is proved in the corollaries that a polygon of an infinite ...
... polygon and circle may be made to coincide so nearly , as to differ from each other by less than any assignable quantity , has been taken from the Edinburgh Encyclopedia . It is proved in the corollaries that a polygon of an infinite ...
Page 182
... polygon . B D A F 10 E If the semicircle and semi - polygon be revolved ... spherical sector is equal to the zone which forms its base , multiplied by a ... polygon becomes the circle , the portion OAB becomes the sector AOB , OI becomes ...
... polygon . B D A F 10 E If the semicircle and semi - polygon be revolved ... spherical sector is equal to the zone which forms its base , multiplied by a ... polygon becomes the circle , the portion OAB becomes the sector AOB , OI becomes ...
Page 186
... polygon is a portion of the surface of a sphere terminated by several arcs of great circles . 4. A lune is that portion of the surface of a sphere , which is included between two great semi ... Spherical Triangles and Spherical Polygons,
... polygon is a portion of the surface of a sphere terminated by several arcs of great circles . 4. A lune is that portion of the surface of a sphere , which is included between two great semi ... Spherical Triangles and Spherical Polygons,
Page 188
... spherical polygon is less than the circumference of a great circle . Take the pentagon ABCDE , for example . Produce the sides AB , DC , till they meet in F ; then since BC is less than BF + CF , the perimeter of the pentagon ABCDE will ...
... spherical polygon is less than the circumference of a great circle . Take the pentagon ABCDE , for example . Produce the sides AB , DC , till they meet in F ; then since BC is less than BF + CF , the perimeter of the pentagon ABCDE will ...
Page 204
... spherical pyramids are to each other as their bases : and since a polygonal pyramid may always be divided into a certain number of triangular ones , it follows that any two spherical pyramids are to each other , as the polygons which ...
... spherical pyramids are to each other as their bases : and since a polygonal pyramid may always be divided into a certain number of triangular ones , it follows that any two spherical pyramids are to each other , as the polygons which ...
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Common terms and phrases
adjacent altitude angle ACB angle BAC 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 gles greater homologous sides hypothenuse inscribed circle inscribed polygon intersection less Let ABC logarithm number of sides opposite parallel parallelogram parallelopipedon pendicular perimeter perpen perpendicular plane MN polyedron polygon ABCDE PROBLEM Prop proportional 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
Popular passages
Page 18 - If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the...
Page 232 - ... the logarithm of a fraction is equal to the logarithm of the numerator minus the logarithm of the denominator.
Page 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.
Page 31 - Hence, the interior angles plus four right angles, is equal to twice as many right angles as the polygon...
Page 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.
Page 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.
Page 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'.
Page 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.
Page 287 - How many square feet are there in the convex surface of the frustum of a square pyramid, whose slant height is 10 feet, each side of the lower base 3 feet 4 inches, and each side of the upper base 2 feet 2 inches ? Ans.
Page 64 - To inscribe a circle in a given triangle. Let ABC be the given triangle. Bisect the angles A and B by the lines AO and BO, meeting at the point 0.