humeral-ulnar joint (elbow), tibial-femoral joint (knee)
Number of planes in the uniaxial joints?
They have one plane of movement. ex: elbow
Flexion ( is a typical of hinge joint ) bending the knee or elbow
The three planes are coronal, sagittal, and transverse (you probably knew this already) so a multiaxial joint can move in all three. So to answer the question, it would be three.
There are two types uniaxial or biaxial.
a state of strain in which two of the three principal strains are zero
Uniaxial movement refers to motion that occurs in only one direction or along a single axis. In the context of biology or anatomy, uniaxial movement can refer to the motion of a joint that allows movement in only one plane or direction, such as flexion and extension at the elbow joint. This is in contrast to biaxial or multiaxial movement, which involve motion in multiple planes or around multiple axes.
The difference between a uniaxial and a biaxial crystal is that a uniaxial crystal has 1 optic axes, while a biaxial crystal has 2 optic axes.
uniaxial rotation
It is defined as the ratio of the uniaxial stress over the uniaxial strain in the range of stress in which Hooke's Law holds
Smoke Two Joints was created in 1983.
There are two general types of joints, movable and immovable. Under the movable category there are four types of joints: Hinge joints: in knees and elbows Pivot joints: in neck Gliding joints: in wrists and ankles Ball-and-socket joints: in shoulders and hips