The Witch of Agnesi Many plane curves in mathematics are named after the people who first investigated them, like the folium of Descartes or the spiral of Archimedes. However, perhaps the strangest name for a curve is the witch of Agnesi. Why a witch? Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718—1799) was one of the few recognized women mathematicians of eighteenth-century Italy. She wrote a popular book on analytic geometry, published in 1748, which included an interesting curve that had been studied by Fermat in 1630. The mathematician Guido Grandi showed in 1703 how to construct this curve, which he later called the “versiera,” a Latin term for a rope used in sailing. Agnesi used the Italian term for this rope, “versiera,” but in Latin, this same word means a "female goblin.” When Agnesi’s book was translated into English in 1801, the translator used the term “witch” for the curve, instead of rope. The name “witch of Agnesi” has stuck ever since. The witch of Agnesi is a curve defined as follows: Start with a Circle of radius a so that the points (0, 0) and (0, 2a) are points on the circle (Figure 7.12). Let O denote the origin. Choose any other point A on the circle, and draw the secant line OA. Let B denote the point at which the line OA intersects the horizontal line through (0, 2a). The vertical line through B intersects the horizontal line through A at the point P. As the point A varies, the path that the point P travels is the witch of Agnesi curve for the given circle. Witch of Agnesi curves have applications in physics, including modeling water waves and distributions of spectral lines. In probability theory, the curve describes the probability density function of the Cauchy distribution. In this project you will parameterize these curves. 6. Show that y = 2 a cos ( π 2 − θ ) sin θ .
The Witch of Agnesi Many plane curves in mathematics are named after the people who first investigated them, like the folium of Descartes or the spiral of Archimedes. However, perhaps the strangest name for a curve is the witch of Agnesi. Why a witch? Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718—1799) was one of the few recognized women mathematicians of eighteenth-century Italy. She wrote a popular book on analytic geometry, published in 1748, which included an interesting curve that had been studied by Fermat in 1630. The mathematician Guido Grandi showed in 1703 how to construct this curve, which he later called the “versiera,” a Latin term for a rope used in sailing. Agnesi used the Italian term for this rope, “versiera,” but in Latin, this same word means a "female goblin.” When Agnesi’s book was translated into English in 1801, the translator used the term “witch” for the curve, instead of rope. The name “witch of Agnesi” has stuck ever since. The witch of Agnesi is a curve defined as follows: Start with a Circle of radius a so that the points (0, 0) and (0, 2a) are points on the circle (Figure 7.12). Let O denote the origin. Choose any other point A on the circle, and draw the secant line OA. Let B denote the point at which the line OA intersects the horizontal line through (0, 2a). The vertical line through B intersects the horizontal line through A at the point P. As the point A varies, the path that the point P travels is the witch of Agnesi curve for the given circle. Witch of Agnesi curves have applications in physics, including modeling water waves and distributions of spectral lines. In probability theory, the curve describes the probability density function of the Cauchy distribution. In this project you will parameterize these curves. 6. Show that y = 2 a cos ( π 2 − θ ) sin θ .
Many plane curves in mathematics are named after the people who first investigated them, like the folium of Descartes or the spiral of Archimedes. However, perhaps the strangest name for a curve is the witch of Agnesi. Why a witch?
Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718—1799) was one of the few recognized women mathematicians of eighteenth-century Italy. She wrote a popular book on analytic geometry, published in 1748, which included an interesting curve that had been studied by Fermat in 1630. The mathematician Guido Grandi showed in 1703 how to construct this curve, which he later called the “versiera,” a Latin term for a rope used in sailing. Agnesi used the Italian term for this rope, “versiera,” but in Latin, this same word means a "female goblin.” When Agnesi’s book was translated into English in 1801, the translator used the term “witch” for the curve, instead of rope. The name “witch of Agnesi” has stuck ever since.
The witch of Agnesi is a curve defined as follows: Start with a Circle of radius a so that the points (0, 0) and (0, 2a) are points on the circle (Figure 7.12). Let O denote the origin. Choose any other point A on the circle, and draw the secant line OA. Let B denote the point at which the line OA intersects the horizontal line through (0, 2a). The vertical line through B intersects the horizontal line through A at the point P. As the point A varies, the path that the point P travels is the witch of Agnesi curve for the given circle.
Witch of Agnesi curves have applications in physics, including modeling water waves and distributions of spectral lines. In probability theory, the curve describes the probability density function of the Cauchy distribution. In this project you will parameterize these curves.
موضوع الدرس
Prove that
Determine the following groups
Homz(QZ) Hom = (Q13,Z)
Homz(Q), Hom/z/nZ, Qt
for neN-
(2) Every factor group of
adivisible group is divisble.
• If R is a Skew ficald (aring with
identity and each non Zero element is
invertible then every R-module is free.
A: Tan Latitude / Tan P
A = Tan 04° 30'/ Tan 77° 50.3'
A= 0.016960 803 S CA named opposite to latitude,
except when hour angle between 090° and 270°)
B: Tan Declination | Sin P
B Tan 052° 42.1'/ Sin 77° 50.3'
B = 1.34 2905601 SCB is alway named same as
declination)
C = A + B = 1.35 9866404 S CC correction, A+/- B:
if A and B have same name - add, If
different name- subtract)
=
Tan Azimuth 1/Ccx cos Latitude)
Tan Azimuth = 0.737640253
Azimuth
=
S 36.4° E CAzimuth takes combined
name of C correction and Hour Angle - If LHA
is between 0° and 180°, it is named "west", if
LHA is between 180° and 360° it is named "east"
True Azimuth= 143.6°
Compass Azimuth = 145.0°
Compass Error = 1.4° West
Variation 4.0 East
Deviation: 5.4 West
A: Tan Latitude / Tan P
A = Tan 04° 30'/ Tan 77° 50.3'
A= 0.016960 803 S CA named opposite to latitude,
except when hour angle between 090° and 270°)
B: Tan Declination | Sin P
B Tan 052° 42.1'/ Sin 77° 50.3'
B = 1.34 2905601 SCB is alway named same as
declination)
C = A + B = 1.35 9866404 S CC correction, A+/- B:
if A and B have same name - add, If
different name- subtract)
=
Tan Azimuth 1/Ccx cos Latitude)
Tan Azimuth = 0.737640253
Azimuth
=
S 36.4° E CAzimuth takes combined
name of C correction and Hour Angle - If LHA
is between 0° and 180°, it is named "west", if
LHA is between 180° and 360° it is named "east"
True Azimuth= 143.6°
Compass Azimuth = 145.0°
Compass Error = 1.4° West
Variation 4.0 East
Deviation: 5.4 West
A Problem Solving Approach To Mathematics For Elementary School Teachers (13th Edition)
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