Sinônimos & Informações Sobre | Palavra Inglês THREE-DIMENSIONAL
THREE-DIMENSIONAL
Número de letras
17
É palíndromo
Não
Exemplos de uso de THREE-DIMENSIONAL em uma frase
- Additive manufacturing, or 3-D printing, a process of making a three-dimensional solid object of virtually any shape from a digital model.
- The area of a plane region or plane area refers to the area of a shape or planar lamina, while surface area refers to the area of an open surface or the boundary of a three-dimensional object.
- Amethyst is a three-dimensional network of tetrahedra where the silicon atoms are in the center and are surrounded by four oxygen atoms located at the vertices of a tetrahedron.
- In geometry, a convex uniform honeycomb is a uniform tessellation which fills three-dimensional Euclidean space with non-overlapping convex uniform polyhedral cells.
- Cone algorithm identifies surface particles quickly and accurately for three-dimensional clusters composed of discrete particles.
- The subject is based upon a three-dimensional Euclidean space with fixed axes, called a frame of reference.
- In vector calculus, the curl, also known as rotor, is a vector operator that describes the infinitesimal circulation of a vector field in three-dimensional Euclidean space.
- In geometry, a cube or regular hexahedron is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six congruent square faces, a type of polyhedron.
- Similarly, the position of any point in three-dimensional space can be specified by three Cartesian coordinates, which are the signed distances from the point to three mutually perpendicular planes.
- The square is two-dimensional (2D) and bounded by one-dimensional line segments; the cube is three-dimensional (3D) and bounded by two-dimensional squares; the tesseract is four-dimensional (4D) and bounded by three-dimensional cubes.
- Originally, in Euclid's Elements, it was the three-dimensional space of Euclidean geometry, but in modern mathematics there are Euclidean spaces of any positive integer dimension n, which are called Euclidean n-spaces when one wants to specify their dimension.
- He became known in the 1990s for his research on the use of genetic algorithms to evolve artificial neural networks using three-dimensional cellular automata inside field programmable gate arrays.
- Morphology (architecture and engineering), research which is based on theories of two-dimensional and three-dimensional symmetries, and then uses these geometries for planning buildings and structures.
- These proteins can misfold sporadically, due to genetic mutations, or by exposure to an already misfolded protein, leading to an abnormal three-dimensional structure that can propagate misfolding in other proteins.
- For example, a two-dimensional polygon is a 2-polytope and a three-dimensional polyhedron is a 3-polytope.
- Originally conjectured by Henri Poincaré in 1904, the theorem concerns spaces that locally look like ordinary three-dimensional space but which are finite in extent.
- In geometry, a parallelepiped is a three-dimensional figure formed by six parallelograms (the term rhomboid is also sometimes used with this meaning).
- The two-dimensional analogue of a 4-polytope is a polygon, and the three-dimensional analogue is a polyhedron.
- An array of stitches is passed through all layers of the fabric to create a three-dimensional padded surface.
- Sculpture is the three-dimensional art work which is physically presented in the dimensions of height, width and depth.
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