Online Encyclopedia

RADIUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 808 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RADIUS  , properly a straight

rod, bar or staff, the
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original meaning of the Latin word, to which also many of the various meanings seen in
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English were attached; it was thus applied to the spokes of a wheel, to the semi-diameter of a circle or sphere and to a ray or beam of
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light, " ray " itself coming through the Fr. raie from radius . From this last sense comes" radiant," " radiation," and allied words . In mathematics, a radius is a straight
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line
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drawn from the centre to the circumference of a circle or to the
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surface of a sphere; in anatomy the name is applied to the
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outer one of the two bones of the fore-arm in man or to the corresponding bone in the fore-leg of animals . It is also used in various other anatomical senses in botany, ichthyology, entomology, &c . A further application of the
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term is to an
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area the extent of which is marked by the length of the radius from the point which is taken as the centre; thus, in
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London, for the purpose of reckoning the fare of hackney-carriages, the radius is taken as extending four miles in any direction from Charing .
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Cross .

End of Article: RADIUS
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RADIUM (from Lat. radius, ray)
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