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A Simple Tip For When You're Stressed
This is a fantastic tip from Touch For Health to help you when you're stressed, angry, anxious or upset. Try holding your frontal eminences. These are bumps on your forehead that many people hold instinctively when they're upset. For those of you...

Adolescent Anger Management Strategies
Adolescent anger management is becoming more prominent in our society. Traditionally, children who enter this last acute phase of bodily and mental development can go through some rough times. As kids enter their preteen and then their teenage...

Are you addicted to your acne trigger?
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Barry Maher and the Skeptic's Guide to Positive Thinking
The flight arrives at Philadelphia airport just after 4:00 AM. Twelve hours late. Barry Maher left home at 5:30 in the morning the day before. The car rental agencies have long since closed so he grabs a cab to Atlantic City. He'll arrive with...

CRM
The story of the emperor's new clothes is a fairy tale about men who fooled the emperor into believing that they had made him a beautiful suit of clothes. In fact they had not made anything. The emperor went out in public wearing nothing but his...

 
Why Study Math? - The Circle

Analytic Geometry is a branch of mathematics that treats the relation of algebraic functions and their respective graphs, or pictures that can be drawn from these functions. Students are first introduced to analytic geometry in Algebra II courses, and delve further into its study in both pre-calculus and calculus courses. Essentially, this branch of mathematics combines geometry and algebra to show what certain mathematical relationships, called functions, look like in the real world.



There are four well known shapes--also known as curves or functions in math jargon-- that students spend a good time studying in analytic geometry. These are the circle, parabola, ellipse, and hyperbola. These curves are called conic sections because they can be derived in a most curious way from a figure called a double-napped cone. A double-napped cone is formed by placing two cones on top of each other, balancing at the tip. Essentially what you end up with is something that looks like an hourglass made out of two ice cream cones--without the ice cream, of course, or the sand. By appropriately slicing the double-napped cone with a plane, we end up with each of the different conic sections.

Of the four conic sections, indubitably the circle is the one with which most people are familiar. One does not have to look to far to find applications of the circle in everyday life, although many of these are taken for granted. The circle, by mathematical definition, is the set of all points which are an equal distance from another fixed point. If you got that the fixed distance is the radius and the fixed point is the center of the circle, take a bow. Well done!



Now what makes the circle so special and why? Well, it is the precise definition of this conic section that has caused this shape to have such a monumental effect on the progress of mankind. For how would man have progressed without the wheel? Precisely because the points of the circle are all the same distance from the center, is the smooth roll of the wheel possible. After all, how efficient would your car or dune buggy be, for that matter, if the wheels were in the shape of hexagons? Ah, I bet you never thought of that. Indeed it is hard to imagine that hungry car salesman making a good pitch for that new car model with those strange hexagonal tires!



Another point that comes to mind regarding circles is why manhole covers are round. Think about this in context of what you now know about circles, and it becomes apparent why this unique shape works for this application. Why would a cover in the shape of a pentagon (five-sided figure) not work here? If the answer is not immediate, think of what might happen to the poor utility worker standing at the bottom of the hole, while his careless coworker fiddled with the cover above.



Conic sections. Yes. Now we see how the precise mathematical definition of a shape as omnipresent as the circle plays a critical role in determining the useful applications of this curiously round shape. Next time you see a circle, think of how lucky you are that your tires are round and not hexagonal. Stay tuned...

About the author:

Joe is a prolific writer of self-help and educational material. Under the penname, JC Page, Joe authored the classic of mathematical ABC's Arithmetic Magic. Joe is also author of the charmingly pithy and popular ebook, Make a Good Impression Every Time: The Secret to Instant Popularity; the seminal collection of verse, Poems for the Mathematically Insecure. For more information, visit his website at www.mathbyjoe.com.

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