The only visible sun seemed to be divided into two halves of orange, like an inverted hyperbola. |
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She was up in her attic one afternoon, trying to concentrate on where to place her asymptotes on her hyperbola, but her mind traveled elsewhere. |
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You depart Earth on a hyperbola, segue into an ellipse around the sun, and approach your destination on another hyperbola. |
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At an eccentricity of exactly one you have a parabola, and for eccentricities greater than one the orbit traces a hyperbola. |
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It feels as if all that laughter's going in a hyperbola above my head, with one of them sitting behind me and the other directly before me. |
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Let us begin where we left off, with the quadratic curves known as the circle, ellipse, hyperbola and parabola. |
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He read Wallis's method for finding a square of equal area to a parabola and a hyperbola which used indivisibles. |
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Their solution is effectively produced by the intersection of a circle and a rectangular hyperbola. |
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Mathematically it intersects the cone's symmetrical image, hence the hyperbola has two identical components. |
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Nevertheless, an object's trajectory is limited to only one lobe of the complete hyperbola and can never reach the second lobe. |
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The students will perhaps themselves construct a hyperbola instead of merely looking at it on a computer. |
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Designed as a rotating disc, the compass picked up the hyperbola or curve caused when it was struck by the rays of the Sun. |
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This function is a hyperbola in the valid domain for plant growth. |
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The focus and directrix of a hyperbola were considered by Pappus. |
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By fitting a hyperbola to the data for the period 1830-1995, Dr Paxton was able to estimate its upper limit. |
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The spate of recent innovation, however, suggests it may be a hyperbola. |
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Canonical equations of a circle, ellipse, parabola and hyperbola. |
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If the number of types of chocolate known at each stage is plotted on a graph, it will roughly correspond to a mathematical curve called a hyperbola. |
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Tetmajer is quickly able to demonstrate that the use of Euler's hyperbola, which up to that time had been the standard technique, is only applicable in the elastic region of the steel used for the bridge. |
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Slice them any way you like, and you have a real-world example of conic sections 6 which can take the form of an ellipse, parabola, or hyperbola. |
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When a slice is taken through a right circular cone such that its slope exceeds the slope of the cone, the perimeter of the slice defines an hyperbola. |
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