Diameter - Wikipedia

Straight line segment that passes through the centre of a circle For other uses, see Diameter (disambiguation).
Circle with   circumference C   diameter D   radius R   centre or origin O
Geometry
Stereographic projection from the top of a sphere onto a plane beneath itProjecting a sphere to a plane
Branches
  • Euclidean
  • Non-Euclidean
    • Elliptic
      • Spherical
    • Hyperbolic
  • Non-Archimedean geometry
  • Projective
  • Affine
  • Synthetic
  • Analytic
  • Algebraic
    • Arithmetic
    • Diophantine
  • Differential
    • Riemannian
    • Symplectic
    • Discrete differential
  • Complex
  • Finite
  • Discrete/Combinatorial
    • Digital
  • Convex
  • Computational
  • Fractal
  • Incidence
  • Noncommutative geometry
    • Noncommutative algebraic geometry
  • Concepts
  • Features
Dimension
  • Straightedge and compass constructions
  • Angle
  • Curve
  • Diagonal
  • Orthogonality (Perpendicular)
  • Parallel
  • Vertex
  • Congruence
  • Similarity
  • Symmetry
Zero-dimensional
  • Point
One-dimensional
  • Line
    • Line segment
    • Ray
    • Curve
  • Length
Two-dimensional
  • Surface
    • Plane
  • Area
  • Polygon
Triangle
  • Centers
  • Altitude
  • Hypotenuse
  • Pythagorean theorem
  • Circular
  • Hyperbolic
  • Spherical
Quadrilateral
  • Parallelogram
    • Square
    • Rectangle
    • Rhombus
    • Rhomboid
  • Trapezoid
  • Kite
Circle
  • Radius
  • Diameter
  • Circumference
  • Disk
  • Area
Three-dimensional
  • Surface area
  • Volume
Polyhedron
  • Platonic Solid
  • Tetrahedron
  • cuboid
    • Cube
  • Octahedron
  • Dodecahedron
  • Icosahedron
  • Pyramid
Solid of revolution
  • Sphere
    • Great circle
  • Cylinder
  • Cone
Four-/other-dimensional
  • 4-polytope
  • Simplex
    • 5-cell
  • Hypercube
    • Tesseract
  • n-sphere
    • Hypersphere
Geometers
by name
  • Aida
  • Aryabhata
  • Ahmes
  • Alhazen
  • Apollonius
  • Archimedes
  • Atiyah
  • Baudhayana
  • Bolyai
  • Brahmagupta
  • Cartan
  • Chern
  • Coxeter
  • Descartes
  • Euclid
  • Euler
  • Gauss
  • Gromov
  • Hilbert
  • Huygens
  • Jyeṣṭhadeva
  • Kātyāyana
  • Khayyám
  • Klein
  • Lobachevsky
  • Manava
  • Minkowski
  • Minggatu
  • Pascal
  • Pythagoras
  • Parameshvara
  • Poincaré
  • Riemann
  • Sakabe
  • Sijzi
  • al-Tusi
  • Veblen
  • Virasena
  • Yang Hui
  • al-Yasamin
  • Zhang
  • List of geometers
by period
BCE
  • Ahmes
  • Baudhayana
  • Manava
  • Pythagoras
  • Euclid
  • Archimedes
  • Apollonius
1–1400s
  • Zhang
  • Kātyāyana
  • Aryabhata
  • Brahmagupta
  • Virasena
  • Alhazen
  • Sijzi
  • Khayyám
  • al-Yasamin
  • al-Tusi
  • Yang Hui
  • Parameshvara
1400s–1700s
  • Jyeṣṭhadeva
  • Descartes
  • Pascal
  • Huygens
  • Minggatu
  • Euler
  • Sakabe
  • Aida
1700s–1900s
  • Gauss
  • Lobachevsky
  • Bolyai
  • Riemann
  • Klein
  • Poincaré
  • Hilbert
  • Minkowski
  • Cartan
  • Veblen
  • Coxeter
  • Chern
Present day
  • Atiyah
  • Gromov
  • v
  • t
  • e

In geometry, a diameter of a circle is any straight line segment that passes through the centre of the circle and whose endpoints lie on the circle. It can also be defined as the longest chord of the circle. Both definitions are also valid for the diameter of a sphere.

In more modern usage, the length d {\displaystyle d} of a diameter is also called the diameter. In this sense one speaks of the diameter rather than a diameter (which refers to the line segment itself), because all diameters of a circle or sphere have the same length, this being twice the radius r . {\displaystyle r.}

d = 2 r or equivalently r = d 2 . {\displaystyle d=2r\qquad {\text{or equivalently}}\qquad r={\frac {d}{2}}.}

The word "diameter" is derived from Ancient Greek: διάμετρος (diametros), "diameter of a circle", from διά (dia), "across, through" and μέτρον (metron), "measure".[1] It is often abbreviated DIA , dia , d , {\displaystyle {\text{DIA}},{\text{dia}},d,} or ∅ . {\displaystyle \varnothing .}

Constructions

[edit]

With straightedge and compass, a diameter of a given circle can be constructed as the perpendicular bisector of an arbitrary chord. Drawing two diameters in this way can be used to locate the center of a circle, as their crossing point.[2] To construct a diameter parallel to a given line, choose the chord to be perpendicular to the line.

The circle having a given line segment as its diameter can be constructed by straightedge and compass, by finding the midpoint of the segment and then drawing the circle centered at the midpoint through one of the ends of the line segment.

Symbol

[edit] "⌀" redirects here. For other uses, see ⌀ (disambiguation).
Diameter sign
In UnicodeU+2300 DIAMETER SIGN
Different from
Different fromU+00D8 Ø LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH STROKEU+00F8 ø LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKEU+2205 EMPTY SETU+2D41 TIFINAGH LETTER BERBER ACADEMY YAHU+2298 CIRCLED DIVISION SLASH
A diameter sign in a technical drawing
A photographic filter marked as having a 58 mm thread diameter

The symbol or variable for diameter, , is sometimes used in technical drawings or specifications as a prefix or suffix for a number (e.g. "⌀ 55 mm"), indicating that it represents diameter.[3] Photographic filter thread sizes are often denoted in this way.[4]

The symbol has a code point in Unicode at U+2300 DIAMETER SIGN, in the Miscellaneous Technical set. It should not be confused with several other characters (such as U+00D8 Ø LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH STROKE or U+2205 EMPTY SET) that resemble it but have unrelated meanings.[5] It has the compose sequence Composedi.[6]

Generalizations

[edit]

The definitions given above are only valid for circles and spheres. However, they are special cases of a more general definition that is valid for any kind of n {\displaystyle n} -dimensional object, or a set of scattered points. The diameter of a set is the least upper bound of the set of all distances between pairs of points in the subset.

A different and incompatible definition is sometimes used for the diameter of a conic section. In this context, a diameter is any chord which passes through the conic's centre. A diameter of an ellipse is any line passing through the centre of the ellipse.[7] Half of any such diameter may be called a semidiameter, although this term is most often a synonym for the radius of a circle or sphere.[8] The longest and shortest diameters are called the major axis and minor axis, respectively. Conjugate diameters are a pair of diameters where one is parallel to a tangent to the ellipse at the endpoint of the other diameter.

Several kinds of object can be measured by equivalent diameter, the diameter of a circular or spherical approximation to the object. This includes hydraulic diameter, the equivalent diameter of a channel or pipe through which liquid flows, and the Sauter mean diameter of a collection of particles.

The diameter of a circle is exactly twice its radius. However, this is true only for a circle, and only in the Euclidean metric. Jung's theorem provides more general inequalities relating the diameter to the radius.

See also

[edit]
  • Caliper – Tool used to measure dimensions of an objectPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
  • Micrometer (device) – Tool for the precise measurement of a component's length, width, and/or depth
  • Eratosthenes – Greek mathematician, geographer, and poet, who calculated the diameter of the Earth around 240 BC.
  • Tangent lines to circles – Line which touches a circle at exactly one point

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Diameter—Origin and meaning of diameter by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  2. ^ "6-66 Finding the center of a circle". General Drafting. Technical manual, TM 5-581A, United States Department of the Army. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1972. p. 6-32.
  3. ^ Puncochar, Daniel E. (1997). Interpretation of Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing (2nd ed.). Industrial Press Inc. p. 5. ISBN 9780831130725.
  4. ^ Ciaglia, Joseph (2002). Introduction to Digital Photography. Prentice Hall. p. 9. ISBN 9780130321367. The filter diameter (in mm) usually follows the symbol ⌀.
  5. ^ Korpela, Jukka K. (2006). Unicode Explained. O'Reilly Media, Inc. p. 171. ISBN 9780596101213.
  6. ^ Monniaux, David. "UTF-8 (Unicode) compose sequence". Retrieved 2018-07-13.
  7. ^ Bogomolny, Alexander. "Conjugate Diameters in Ellipse". www.cut-the-knot.org.
  8. ^ Raphson, Joseph; Ozanam, Jacques (1702). A Mathematical Dictionary. J. Nicholson, and T. Leigh and D. Midwinter. p. 26.
Look up diameter in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Common punctuation and other typographical symbols
  •       space 
  •   ,   comma 
  •   :   colon 
  •   ;   semicolon 
  •   ‐   hyphen 
  •   ’   '   apostrophe 
  •   ′   ″   ‴   prime 
  •   .   full stop 
  •   &   ampersand 
  •   @   at sign 
  •   ^   caret 
  •   /   slash 
  •   \   backslash 
  •   …   ellipsis 
  •   *   asterisk 
  •   ※   Reference mark 
  •   ⁂   asterism 
  •             dinkus 
  •   -   hyphen-minus 
  •   ‒   –   —   dash 
  •   ⹀   ⸗   double hyphen 
  •   ?   question mark 
  •   !   exclamation mark 
  •   ‽   interrobang 
  •   ¡   ¿   inverted ! and ? 
  •   ⸮   irony punctuation 
  •   #   number sign 
  •   №   numero sign 
  •   º   ª   ordinal indicator 
  •   %   percent sign 
  •   ‰   per mille 
  •   ‱   basis point 
  •   °   degree symbol 
  •   ⌀   diameter sign 
  •   +   −   plus and minus signs 
  •   ×   multiplication sign 
  •   ÷   division sign 
  •   ~   tilde 
  •   ±   plus–minus sign 
  •   ∓   minus-plus sign 
  •   √   radical symbol 
  •   _   underscore 
  •    tie 
  •   |   ¦   ‖   vertical bar 
  •   •   bullet 
  •   ·   interpunct 
  •   ©   copyright symbol 
  •   ℗   sound recording copyright 
  •   ®   registered trademark 
  •  SM  service mark symbol 
  •  TM  trademark symbol 
  •   ‘ ’   “ ”   ' '   " "   quotation mark 
  •   ‹ ›   « »   guillemet 
  •   ( )   [ ]   { }   ⟨ ⟩   bracket 
  •   ”   ditto mark 
  •   †   ‡   dagger 
  •   ❧   fleuron (hedera, aldus) 
  •   ☞   manicule 
  •   ◊   ⌑   lozenge 
  •   ¶   ⸿   pilcrow (paragraph mark) 
  •   §   section mark 
  • Version of this table as a sortable list
  • Currency symbols
  • Diacritics (accents)
  • Logic symbols
  • Math symbols
  • Whitespace
  • Chinese punctuation
  • Hebrew punctuation
  • Japanese punctuation
  • Korean punctuation
  • Vietnamese punctuation
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • GND
National
  • United States
  • Israel

Tag » A Line Segment Passing Through The Centre Of Circle And Whose Endpoints Lie On The Circle Is Called