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  sphere – vertex

sphere   A closed surface, all points of which are equidistant from a given point, called the center.


In 3-dimensional Euclidean space, the equation of a sphere of radius r and center (h, j, k) is


The term sphere may also refer to the solid bounded by this surface, and the interior is then called the open sphere of radius r.
More generally, a sphere may be defined as the set of points in n-dimensional space (or any metric space) equidistant from a given point. The unit sphere in n-dimensional space is typically denoted S n - 1. Thus, the unit sphere in ordinary 3-space is denoted S2, and the unit circle in the plane is denoted S1.


square   A regular polygon having four equal sides and four right angles.




supplemental angles   Two angles are supplemental if they add up to 180 degrees (p radians).
Cf. complementary angles.


tesselation   A tiling of the plane, i.e. the use of plane figures to completely cover the plane without overlaps or gaps. A regular tesselation uses only a finite number of distinct shapes. Most regular tesselations are periodic, but some are aperiodic.
Cf. polygon, Penrose tiles.


Related MiniText: Mathematical Art of M.C. Escher

tetrahedron   A polyhedron having four faces.


The faces of a regular tetrahedron are congruent, equilateral triangles.
Cf. Platonic solid.


tiling   See tesselation.

triangle   Geometry: A closed plane figure with three straight sides meeting at three vertices. If one side of a triangle is chosen as the base, then the height of the triangle is the perpendicular distance to the base from the vertex opposite the base.


Triangles are classified by their angle measures:
  • Acute – all angles less than 90°.
  • Obtuse – one angle greater than 90°.
  • Right – one angle exactly 90°.
  • Scalene – all angles and sides unequal.
  • Isosceles – two angles equal (equivalently, two sides equal).
  • Equilateral – all angles equal (equivalently, all sides equal).


On a right triangle, the sides adjacent to the right angle are called the legs, and the side opposite is called the hypotenuse.
Cf. Pythagorean Theorem.
Graph Theory: A cycle with three vertices.


unit circle   A circle with radius 1.

unit interval   The interval on the real number line from 0 to 1, inclusive.

unit square   The set of points of the Cartesian plane with domain and range values in the unit interval, that is the square region with vertices (0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 0), and (1, 1), including its boundary.

vertex   Geometry: In a plane figure, a point which is a common end-point for two or more lines or curves.
Graph Theory: One of two kinds of entities in a graph.
Cf. edge.


 





NOWHERE DENSE MATH HUMOR BOOK




MATH ART OF MC ESCHER




HEX - THE GAME




ZENO'S PARADOX
   
sphere – vertex



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