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Circles, parabolas, ellipses, and hyperbolas are all conic sections. Out of these conic sections, the circle and ellipse are the ones which define a closed curve.
circle and ellipse are closed curved conic section!, from bilal , Pakistan
Az 135 degrees.
Leibniz
A conic section is the intersection of a plane and a cone.The circle is a conic section where the plane is perpendicular to the axis of the cone. The special case of a point is where the vertex of the cone lies on the plane.The ellipse is a conic section where the plane is not perpendicular to the axis, but its angle is less than one of the nappes. The special case of a point is where the vertex of the cone lies on the plane.The parabola is a conic section where the plane is parallel to one of the nappes. The special case of two intersecting lines is where the vertex of the cone lies on the plane.The hyperbole is a conic section where the angle of the plane is greater than on of the nappes. There are two sides to the hyperbole. The special case of two lines intersecting is where the vertex of the cone lies on the plane.For more information, please see the Related Link below.
conic, planar, cylindrical, and azimuthal
they are cylindrical, azimuthal, and conic.
dnt care dnt no
The Cylindrical projection should be the basis for a large rectangular area and a Conic projection for a triangular area.Therefore use a circular/Azimuthal for a small area or even conic.
Cylindrical
When calculating a bearing, azimuthal notation refers to the angle of the bearing from North, measured clockwise. Quadrant notation takes the bearing from north or south with a change to west or east. For example, Quadrant notation: SE = Azimuth notation of 135 degrees.
Discounting the Mercator, which cartographers tend to HATE but is ubiquitous anyway... Probably the Lambert Conformal Conic projection, or the Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection (used by the US National Atlas).
An azimuthal quantum number is a quantum number which represents the angular momentum of an atomic orbital.
An azimuthal quantum number is a quantum number which represents the angular momentum of an atomic orbital.
Two other projection methods used by geographers and mapmakers are the azimuthal projection, which displays the Earth's surface with a single point from a specific location as the central point, and the conic projection, which projects the Earth's surface onto a cone wrapped around it. Each of these methods has strengths and weaknesses depending on the purpose of the map being created.
Conic means pretaining to or ressembling a cone
The types of conic sections are circles, parabolas, hyperbolas, and ellipses.