coolade
pi*a*b where a = half length of major axis (horizontal) and b = half length of minor axis (vertical)
Horizontal
horizontal
The length of Saturn's rotation on its axis is about ten and a half hours.
It is not accurately described in the Gospels - or elsewhere. Tradition depicts what is now known as a "Latin cross" - one where the horizontal beam crosses the vertical one about a third of the way from the top, and in which the two 'arms' and the upper part of the vertical piece are about the same length, and are about half the length of the lower part of the vertical piece.
The bisector of a segment is a line that cuts the segment into exact half. For example, if the vertical line bisects the horizontal line in " T ", the vertical line cuts touches the horizontal line at the midpoint of the horizontal line
In the standard equation for an ellipse, b is half the length of the _____ axis.Answer:
WF5Cl: C5 axis (rotation by 72 degrees), σh plane of symmetry (horizontal plane that cuts the molecule in half) SiH3CN: C3 axis (rotation by 120 degrees), σv plane of symmetry (vertical plane that cuts the molecule in half)
Check out "horizontal cylindric segment" in Wolfram Alpha Online. That is the correct term for the solid you are looking for. Wolfram Alpha - "The solid cut from a horizontal cylinder of length L and radius R by a single plane oriented parallel to the cylinder's axis of symmetry (i.e., a portion of a horizontal cylindrical tank which is partially filled with fluid) is called a horizontal cylindrical segment."
-- Label the vertical (' y ') axis ' w '.-- Draw a horizontal line on the graph, passing it through the pointon the vertical axis where w=5.-- Draw gigantic light 'X's, or shadows or slanty lines or squiggles, everywhereabove the horizontal line, indicating that every point in that infinite half-planeabove the line, as well as every point on the line itself, is a solution of the inequality.
Everyone including books and people answering on this website get this wrong. It does matter and the rule is simple. If your horizontal access is something where it is not possible to rank in any special order- for example favourite crisp flavours or different ways of getting to work - then the bars are separate. I think spacing of a third or half the bar width looks neatest. If you have a horizontal axis of some grouped data, like length of leaves, then you have a histogram and the bars touch. Strictly a histogram has a vertical axis of density to accommodate different width groupings. In many cases all the widths are identical and you have a simple frequency up the vertical axis. There does not seem any unaminity of the correct name for this animal. On the one hand I'd use "histogram" so it's clear the bars touch but then some purists object because the vertical axis isn't density. On balance I'd still call it a histogram.
An oval, or more technically an ellipse, has a long ( major) axis and short (minor axis). If major axis length is a and minor length is b, then area, A is A = pi*a*b /4 where and so the area of half an oval is pi*a*b/8