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Why are nuclear power plants in a hyperbolic shape?

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Vivien Cassin

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4y ago

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Q: Why are nuclear power plants in a hyperbolic shape?
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What shape is a pringle?

A pringle is a hyperbolic peraloid, and a tasty crisp!


Could you describe the shape of the graph of an inverse relationship as hyperbolic?

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What 3d shape has one face no edges and no vertices?

A sphere An ellipsoid A hyperbolic paraboloid


What is the definition of the word hyperbolic?

"Exaggerated" or related to the shape of a "hyperbola" (which looks kind of like a U) in math.


What shape has no sides?

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Why did a nuclear power plant chooses an egglike shape reactor?

The reactor is not Egg like. It is the Containment area that is egg like, So no steam or nuclear radiation cannot escape.


What is the shape of the nuclear envelope?

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What shape has 4 sides and all angles equal?

Presuming our geometry is Euclidean, such a shape would be a rectangle, since all 4 angles would be right angles. If our geometry is hyperbolic, it would be possible to construct such a quadrilateral which is not a rectangle (and in fact, rectangles cannot exist in a hyperbolic geometry). I do not believe such a quadrilateral has any special name.


Is hyperbolic a type of chemical reaction?

No; hyperbolic is a term of geometry or cosmology to describe something as having a relationship with a parabola (an infinite three-dimensional curved shape), or in debate to refer to a hyperbole claim or statement which is an overstatement or plausible exaggeration. There is no known application to chemical reactions.


Use of hyperbolic functions?

If you hold a chain at both ends and let it hang loosely, the path of the chain follows the path of the hyperbolic cosine. (This is also the shape of the St. Lois Arch.) Also, the integrals of many useful functions. For example, if an object is falling in a constant gravitational field with air resistance, the velocity of the object as a function of time involves the inverse hyperbolic tangent.


Can a power plant can explode like a nuclear weapon?

No, a nuclear weapon needs a specific geometry to detonate, and it has to be held in this position by very high explosives to keep it in this shape. In a nuclear reactor, if the reactor core goes critical then the force of the expanding coolant will blow the reactor apart, preventing a nuclear blast.


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