A compound shape is editable art consisting of two or more objects, each assigned a shape mode. Compound shapes make it easy to create complex shapes because you can precisely manipulate the shape mode, stacking order, shape, and location for each path included. Within a compound shape, you can include paths, compound paths, groups, other compound shapes, blends, text, envelopes, and warps, any of which can carry live effects. Open paths included in compound shapes are automatically closed. Compound shapes act as grouped objects. To select components of a compound shape, use the direct-selection tool or the group-selection tool. To make changes to the stacking order of the components
The word "paths" is in the King James Version of the Bible 42 times. It is in 41 verses.
The question should be, "Are you lying?"
one
I need hardly explain where you encounter circles.Ellipses are encountered when you cut a cylindrical object (e.g., a sausage) at an angle. Parabolas are the approximate paths taken by objects thrown into the air (when air resistance is insignificant). Hyperbolas: I may be wrong, but it would seem that these are less common in real life. ALL of the conic sections can be seen when you shine a flashlight onto a level floor (or some other plane), since the light cone is, precisely, a cone.
Non-example orbits are trajectories of objects in space that do not follow a predictable, regular path around a central body. This could include objects that follow hyperbolic or parabolic paths, or objects that do not travel in a closed loop around a central body. Examples of non-example orbits could include comets with highly eccentric paths or interstellar objects passing through a solar system.
Gas particles move in a random and constant motion, frequently colliding with each other and their surroundings. While they do not travel in perfectly straight paths, they do exhibit some degree of directional motion until they collide with other particles.
Because of interference of other waves & interruption of objects
Objects in our solar system, including planets, asteroids, and comets, travel around the Sun in elliptical orbits. The planets orbit the Sun in nearly circular paths along a plane known as the ecliptic. Comets and asteroids can have more eccentric and tilted orbits compared to the planets.
You might contrast objects in open orbit with those in closed orbit such as the Earth. Up to an approximation, and relative to the Sun, when the Earth completes an orbit around the Sun it returns to the same place in space. Thus it can be said to 'close' its orbit. Objects that do not return to the same point in space are said to be in open orbit. They might be following parabolic or hyperbolic paths, or some other more complicated locuses of points.
Long-period comets such as Halley's Comet have elliptical orbits that stretch billions of miles out of the solar system and back again. Other comets have hyperbolic orbits that bring them close once but never again, or at least not for many millions of years.
Both
Elliptical satellites don't have a constant speed, but circular satellites do
Many objects travel around the sun, including planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, and artificial satellites. The sun's gravitational pull keeps these objects in orbit around it, following predictable paths.
That's the idea that Earth is in the center, and other objects move in complicated paths around Earth.
Dalton
Helium atoms do not travel in circular paths. Instead, they move in straight lines until they collide with other particles or the walls of their container. The motion of helium atoms is governed by principles of kinetic theory.