A Course of Mathematics ...: Composed for the Use of the Royal Military Academy ... |
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altitude angle assumed axis ball base beam becomes centre circle consequently construction Corol cosine curve denote determine diameter direction distance divided double draw drawn earth effect equal equation expression fall feet figure fluent fluxion force former given gives greater greatest half Hence inches known latter length less manner means measured meet method motion moving nearly negative obtain opposite parallel pass perpendicular plane polygon positive preceding PROBLEM produced proportional quantity radius ratio resistance respectively right line roots rule sides similar sine solid space sphere spherical square suppose surface tangent theor THEOREM theref third tion triangle velocity vertical weight whole
Popular passages
Page 124 - Since the exterior angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the two interior opposite angles (th.
Page 261 - Or, by art. 3 14 of the same, the pressure is equal to the weight of a column of the fluid, •whose base is equal to the surface pressed, and its altitude equal to the depth of the centre of gravity below...
Page 86 - A solid angle is that which is made by the meeting of more than two plane angles, which are not in the same plane, in one point. X. ' The tenth definition is omitted for reasons given in the notes.
Page 145 - D'Alembert, was the Precession of the equinoxes and the Nutation of the earth's axis, according to the theory of gravitation.
Page 176 - Cor. 3. An equation will want its third term, if the sum of the products of the roots taken two and two, is partly positive, partly negative, and these mutually destroy each other. Remark.
Page 80 - Any Two Sides of a Spherical Triangle are together Greater than the Third.
Page 92 - In Every Spherical Triangle, the Sines of the Angles are Proportional to the Sines of their. Opposite Sides. If, from the first of the equations marked...
Page 55 - The COSINE of an arc, is the sine of the complement of that arc, and is equal to the part of the radius comprised between the centre of the circle and the foot of the sine...
Page 174 - ... preceding equation is only of the fourth power or degree ; but it is manifest that the above remark applies to equations of higher or lower dimensions : viz. that in general an equation of any degree whatever has as many roots as there are units in the exponent of the highest power of the unknown quantity, and...
Page 76 - Prove that, in any plane triangle, the base is to the difference of the other two sides, as the sine of half the sum of the angles at the base, to the sine of half their difference : also, that the...