| Charles Davison - Geometry, Solid - 1905 - 140 pages
...parallel to the axis of the cylinder. THE CONE. 67. DEF. 53. A right circular cone is the solid generated by the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of the sides containing the right angle. The side about which the triangle revolves is called the axis of the cone ; the hypotenuse traces out... | |
| Joseph H. Rose - Sheet-metal work - 1906 - 340 pages
...straight line which passes through the center and is terminated both ways by the surface of the sphere. A cone is a solid figure described by the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of its sides containing the right angle, which side remains fixed — Fig. 23. The axis of a cone is the... | |
| Charles Westinghouse - Machine design - 1906 - 168 pages
...straight lin& which passes through the center and is terminated both ways by the surface of the sphere. A cone is a solid figure described by the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of its sides containing the right angle, which side remains fixed — Fig. 55. The axis of a cone is the... | |
| Calvin Franklin Swingle - Engineering - 1906 - 490 pages
...straight line which passes through the center and is terminated both ways by the surface of the sphere. A cone is a solid figure described by the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of its sides containing the right angle, which side remains fixed — Fig. 55. The ba»e of the cone is... | |
| Alva Walker Stamper - Geometry - 1906 - 188 pages
...excellent mathematician of the first century BC, the following remarks: 'The ancients, defining a cone as the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of the sides containing the right angle, naturally supposed also that all conies are right and there is only one kind of section in each —... | |
| 1906 - 576 pages
...successfully used. Cone. — A cone is the figure produced by turning a right-angled triangle round one of the sides containing the right angle, which side remains fixed. The cone A in Fig. 52 may be considered Fig. 51. — Parallel Current Jet Condensing Plant, Rope Driven.... | |
| Joseph Gregory Horner - Engineering - 1906 - 562 pages
...successfully used. Cone. — A cone is the figure produced by turning a right-angled triangle round one of the sides containing the right angle, which side remains fixed. The cone A in Fig. 52 may be considered Fig. 51. — Parallel Current Jet Condensing Plant, Rope Driven.... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1907 - 794 pages
...conic section is the curve in which a plane cuts a cone, which is defined in Euclid's Elementa as " a solid figure described by the revolution of a right-angled...containing the right angle, which side remains fixed." Though the properties of conic sections can be investigated from this point of view, we consider it... | |
| Alva Walker Stamper - Geometry - 1909 - 214 pages
...excellent mathematician of the first century BC, the following remarks: 'The ancients, defining a cone as the revolution of a right-angled triangle about one of the sides containing the right angle, naturally supposed also that all conics are right and there is only one kind of section in each —... | |
| Charles Leonard-Stuart, George Jotham Hagar - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1912 - 666 pages
...line of pipes or an underground channel of some kind for the conveyance of water. Cone, in geometry, a solid figure described by the revolution of a rightangled...containing the right angle, which side remains fixed. Coney Island, a small island in the Borough of Brooklyn, about 10 miles SB of New York city. It :i... | |
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