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Archimedean spiral

archimedian_spiral.png
An Archimedean spiral is a curve which in polar coordinates (r, θ) can be described by the equation
with real numbers a and b. Changing the parameter a will turn the spiral, while b controls the distance between the arms.

This Archimedean spiral is distinguished from the logarithmic spiral by the fact that successive arms have a fixed distance (equal to 2πb if θ is measured in radians), while in a logarithmic spiral these distances form a geometric progression.

Note that the Archimedean spiral has two arms, one for θ > 0 and one for θ < 0. The two arms are smoothly connected at the origin. Only one arm is shown on the accompanying graph. Taking the mirror image of this arm at the y axis will yield the other arm.

Sometimes the term Archimedean spiral is used for the more general group of spirals

The normal Archimedean spiral occurs when x = 1. Other spirals falling into this group include the hyperbolic spiral, Fermat's spiral, and the lituus. Virtually all spirals appearing in nature are logarithmic spirals, not Archimedean ones.

Referenced By

Archimedes | Archimedes (disambiguation) | Archimedes of Syracuse | Fermat's spiral | Golden spiral | Hyperbolic spiral | List of mathematical topics | List of mathematical topics (A-C) | List of mathematics topics | Logarithmic spiral | Quadrature of the circle | Spiral | Squaring the circle

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Archimedean spiral".

 

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