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symmetry |
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symmetryExact likeness in shape about a given line (axis), point, or plane. A figure has symmetry if one half can be rotated and/or reflected onto the other. (Symmetry preserves length, angle, but not necessarily orientation.) In a wider sense, symmetry exists if a change in the system leaves the essential features of the system unchanged; for example, reversing the sign of electric charges does not change the electrical behaviour of an arrangement of charges. Line symmetryIn the diagram, the letter A has one line of symmetry, or mirror line, shown by the dotted line. This is the line of reflection:Rotational symmetryThe diagram shows that the shape may be rotated about O into three identical positions. It has rotational symmetry of order three:Transformation of shapes can also take place by translation, rotation, reflection, and enlargement. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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An axi-symmetric finite element model produced a value (10 [+ or -] 2. Figure 3 presents an FEA mesh in axi-symmetric elements, and pinpoints materials involved. If a casting is symmetrical about a center plane, or axi-symmetric about a center axis (such as a hub casting), then it is not necessary to model the entire casting. |
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