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A parabola is a curve produced when a cone is cut by a plane. It is one of the family of curves called conic sections that also includes the circle, ellipse, and hyperbola. These curves are produced when the plane cuts the cone at different angles and positions.

In geometry, the locus of a point moving according to specified conditions. The circle is the locus of all points equidistant from a given point (the centre). Other common geometrical curves are the ellipse, parabola, and hyperbola, which are also produced when a cone is cut by a plane at different angles.

Many curves have been invented for the solution of special problems in geometry and mechanics – for example, the cissoid (the inverse of a parabola) and the cycloid.



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Define radius of the closed curve C as infinite, C represents a straight line in plane [Omega], which will be divided into upper regional [[Omega].
k] are the Fourier coefficients defined by [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] Let [gamma] be a closed curve of length 2[pi]r: If x : g [right arrow] [R.
5 shows the density estimates for the curvatures of profiles, the curvature axis starts close to 6 as the curvature of a closed curve C in [R.
 
 
 
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