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Solid cylinders
The definitions and results in this section
are taken from the 1913 text, Plane and
Solid Geometry by George Wentworth and
David Eugene Smith (Wentworth & Smith
1913).
Cylindric sections
Cylindric section
Volume
V = πr2h.
L = 2πrh.
L = e × p,
Hollow cylinder
Cylindrical surfaces
In some areas of geometry and topology
the term cylinder refers to what we have
called a cylindrical surface. To repeat,
throughout this section a cylinder is
defined as a surface consisting of all the
points on all the lines which are parallel to
a given line and which pass through a fixed
plane curve in a plane not parallel to the
given line.[12] Such cylinders have, at times,
been referred to as generalized cylinders.
Through each point of a generalized
cylinder there passes a unique line that is
contained in the cylinder.[13] Thus, this
definition may be rephrased to say that a
cylinder is any ruled surface spanned by a
one-parameter family of parallel lines.
P b li li d
Parabolic cylinder
where
Projective geometry
In projective geometry, a cylinder is simply
a cone whose apex (vertex) lies on the
plane at infinity. If the cone is a quadratic
cone, the plane at infinity passing through
the vertex can intersect the cone at two
real lines, a single real line (actually a
coincident pair of lines), or only at the
vertex. These cases give rise to the
hyperbolic, parabolic or elliptic cylinders
respectively.[17]
Prisms
Polyhedron
Tiling
Config. 2.4.4 3.4.4 4.4.4 5.4.4 6.4.4 7.4.4 8.4.4 9.4.4 10.4.4 11.4.4 12.4.4
See also
Steinmetz solid, the intersection of two
or three perpendicular cylinders
Notes
1. κύλινδρος Archived 2013-07-30 at the
Wayback Machine., Henry George Liddell,
Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on
Perseus
2. Jacobs, Harold R. (1974), Geometry, W.
H. Freeman and Co., p. 607, ISBN 0-7167-
0456-0
3. Swokowski 1983, p. 283
4. Wentworth & Smith 1913, p. 354
5. Wentworth & Smith 1913, p. 357
6. "MathWorld: Cylindric section" . Archived
from the original on 2008-04-23.
7. Wentworth & Smith 1913, p. 359
8. Lax, Peter D.; Terrell, Maria Shea (2013),
Calculus With Applications , Undergraduate
Texts in Mathematics, Springer, p. 178,
ISBN 9781461479468, archived from the
original on 2018-02-06.
9. Wentworth & Smith 1913, p. 358
10. Swokowski 1983, p. 292
11. Swokowski 1983, p. 291
12. Albert 2016, p. 43
13. Albert 2016, p. 49
14. Brannan, David A.; Esplen, Matthew F.;
Gray, Jeremy J. (1999), Geometry,
Cambridge University Press, p. 34,
ISBN 978-0-521-59787-6
15. Albert 2016, p. 74
16. Albert 2016, p. 75
17. Pedoe, Dan (1988) [1970], Geometry a
Comprehensive Course, Dover, p. 398,
ISBN 0-486-65812-0
18. Slaught, H.E.; Lennes, N.J. (1919), Solid
Geometry with Problems and Applications
(PDF) (Revised ed.), Allyn and Bacon,
pp. 79–81, archived (PDF) from the original
on 2013-03-06
References
Albert, Abraham Adrian (2016) [1949],
Solid Analytic Geometry, Dover,
ISBN 978-0-486-81026-3
Swokowski, Earl W. (1983), Calculus with
Analytic Geometry (Alternate ed.),
Prindle,Weber & Schmidt, ISBN 0-87150-
341-7
Wentworth, George; Smith, David
Eugene (1913), Plane and Solid
Geometry, Ginn and Co.
External links
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to Cylinder (geometry).
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