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・ Section23 Films
・ Sectional
・ Sectional Appendix
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・ Sectional cooler
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・ Sections 4 and 10 of the Human Rights Act 1998
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・ Sector
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Sector (instrument)
・ Sector 1 (Bucharest)
・ Sector 16 Stadium
・ Sector 2 (Bucharest)
・ Sector 236 – Thor's Wrath
・ Sector 27
・ Sector 28 metro station
・ Sector 3
・ Sector 3 (Bucharest)
・ Sector 4 (Bucharest)
・ Sector 41
・ Sector 42 Stadium
・ Sector 5 (Bucharest)
・ Sector 56, Mohali
・ Sector 6 (Bucharest)


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Sector (instrument) : ウィキペディア英語版
Sector (instrument)

The sector, also known as a proportional compass or military compass, was a major calculating instrument in use from the end of the sixteenth century until the nineteenth century. It is an instrument consisting of two rulers of equal length joined by a hinge. A number of scales are inscribed upon the instrument which facilitate various mathematical calculations. It was used for solving problems in proportion, trigonometry, multiplication and division, and for various functions, such as squares and cube roots. Its several scales permitted easy and direct solutions of problems in gunnery, surveying and navigation. The sector derives its name from the fourth proposition of the sixth book of Euclid, where it is demonstrated that similar triangles have their like sides proportional. It has four parts, two legs with a pivot (the articulation), a quadrant and a clamp (the curved part at the end of the leg) that enables the compass to function as a gunner's quadrant.
==History==
The sector was invented, essentially simultaneously and independently, by a number of different people prior to the start of the 17th century.
Fabrizio Mordente (1532 – ca 1608) was an Italian mathematician who is best known for his invention of the "proportional eight-pointed compass" which has two arms with cursors that allow the solution of problems in measuring the circumference, area and angles of a circle. In 1567 he published a single sheet treatise in Venice showing illustrations of his device. In 1585 Giordano Bruno used Mordente's compass to refute Aristotle's hypothesis on the incommensurability of infinitesimals, thus confirming the existence of the "minimum" which laid the basis of his own atomic theory.
Credit for the invention is often given to either Thomas Hood, a British mathematician, or to the Italian mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei. Galileo, with the help of his personal instrument maker Marc'Antonio Mazzoleni, created more than 100 copies of his military compass design and trained students in its use between 1595 and 1598. Of the credited inventors, Galileo is certainly the most famous, and earlier studies usually attributed its invention to him.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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