From: Walter Roberson on 20 May 2010 10:40 striker wrote: > Thanks for your help.It was very nice of you.kindly guide me that what > are the equations for each of the functions that you have used. In each case, the equations are x = F(z) * ri * cos(theta) y = F(z) * ri * sin(theta) Anything beyond that is just a matter of expanding the particular F(z) .
From: Walter Roberson on 20 May 2010 10:48 mat001 wrote: > Dear Sir, > > you seems to be very experienced with cylinder. I just applied some elementary algebra. > So i would like to discuss my problem also. > > If I need cylinder with finite volume then how to start. Just do not feed the formula any infinite coordinates and you will get a cylinder with a finite volume. If you want the result to have a _specific_ volume, you will need to be clearer as to what parameters are free to vary. Remember the basic formula for volume of a cylinder, V = Pi*r^2*h
From: mat001 on 20 May 2010 11:16 Walter Roberson <roberson(a)hushmail.com> wrote in message <VYbJn.11586$7d5.8954(a)newsfe17.iad>... > mat001 wrote: > > > Dear Sir, > > > > you seems to be very experienced with cylinder. > > I just applied some elementary algebra. > > > > So i would like to discuss my problem also. > > > > If I need cylinder with finite volume then how to start. > > Just do not feed the formula any infinite coordinates and you will get a > cylinder with a finite volume. > > If you want the result to have a _specific_ volume, you will need to be > clearer as to what parameters are free to vary. Remember the basic > formula for volume of a cylinder, V = Pi*r^2*h sorry I mean to say I am using finite volume method
From: Walter Roberson on 20 May 2010 14:41
"mat001 " <priya.biomath(a)yahoo.co.in> wrote in message <ht3jnl$qch$1(a)fred.mathworks.com>... > Walter Roberson <roberson(a)hushmail.com> wrote in message <VYbJn.11586$7d5.8954(a)newsfe17.iad>... > > mat001 wrote: > > > If I need cylinder with finite volume then how to start. > > If you want the result to have a _specific_ volume, you will need to be > > clearer as to what parameters are free to vary. Remember the basic > > formula for volume of a cylinder, V = Pi*r^2*h > sorry I mean to say I am using finite volume method Sorry, I do not know that the "finite volume method" is? |