Plane curves

Cochleoid

In geometry, a cochleoid is a snail-shaped curve similar to a strophoid which can be represented by the polar equation the Cartesian equation or the parametric equations The cochleoid is the inverse curve of Hippias' quadratrix. (Wikipedia).

Cochleoid
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the C language (part 2 of 5)

Introduction to the C programming language. Part of a larger series teaching programming. See http://codeschool.org

From playlist The C language

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New Programming Language Spotlight: Bandicoot

Bandicoot is a new set-based language for relational database projects. Check out the creators talking about why they created it and why you should use it.

From playlist Programming Podcast

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Pascal Boyer - Aesthetic Cognitivism: Overview & Concepts

Free access to Closer to Truth's library of 5,000 videos: http://bit.ly/2UufzC7 Aesthetic Cognitivism is a theory about the value of the arts as sources of understanding—the arts as more than sources of delight, amusement, pleasure, or emotional catharsis (though they can certainly be all

From playlist Aesthetic Cognitivism: Overview & Concepts - CTT Interview Series

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The Coriolis Effect

From the LSOP Live Weather Show https://www.lsop.colostate.edu/lsop-live/

From playlist LSOP Live

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the C language (part 5 of 5)

Introduction to the C programming language. Part of a larger series teaching programming. See http://codeschool.org

From playlist The C language

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Metacognition and speaking | Introduction | Part 1

In this video, I provide an overview of metacognition and discuss its role in speaking.

From playlist Metacognition

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Do We Live in a Special Part of the Universe?

In ancient times, astronomers and philosophers thought that the Earth was the center of the Universe. We know that’s wrong, but is there anything special about where we live? Support us at: http://www.patreon.com/universetoday More stories at: http://www.universetoday.com/ Follow us on Tw

From playlist Cosmology

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Clojure - creating macros

Part of a series teaching the Clojure language. For other programming topics, visit http://codeschool.org

From playlist the Clojure language

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What is the Coriolis Effect?

Centrifugal force is not the only fictitious force to rear its ugly head in a rotating frame of reference. There's another one called the Coriolis force that affects moving things and it makes things even weirder. Video Links: Centrifugal Force Does NOT Exist! http://youtu.be/zHpAifN_2Sw

From playlist Rotation

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AWESOME Physics demonstration. Coriolis effect (explained)!!!

The Coriolis effect refers to the apparent deflection of objects (such as airplanes, wind, missiles, and ocean currents) moving in a straight path relative to the Earth's surface. Its strength is proportional to the speed of the Earth's rotation at different latitudes. For example, a plane

From playlist MECHANICS

Related pages

Strophoid | Inverse curve | Quadratrix of Hippias | Howard Eves | Parametric equation