"Some will curvature of the spine usually doesn't stand up straight."
The cervical curvature is the most superior spinal curvature.
no not all the time
The radius of curvature is the distance from the center of a curved surface or lens to a point on the surface, while the center of curvature is the point at the center of the sphere of which the curved surface is a part. In other words, the radius of curvature is the length of the line segment from the center to the surface, while the center of curvature is the actual point.
The curvature of a lens refers to the amount of bending in the lens surface. A lens can have a convex curvature (outward bending) or a concave curvature (inward bending), which affects how it refracts light. Curvature is measured by the radius of curvature, which can determine the focal length and strength of the lens.
The respelling of "curverature" is "curvature".
Radius of curvature divided by tube diameter. To get the radius of curvature, imaging the bend in the tube is a segment of a circle, the radius of curvature is the radius of that circle.
A plane mirror is not curved so it does not have a center of curvature. Or if you want to be mathematically correct, you could say that it's center of curvature is at an infinite distance from the mirror.
1/aAccording to Wikipedia,"The canonical example of extrinsic curvature is that of a circle, which has curvature equal to the inverse of its radius everywhere. Smaller circles bend more sharply, and hence have higher curvature. The curvature of a smooth curve is defined as the curvature of its osculating circle at each point."
Curvature is a general term to describe a graph. Like, concave or convex. Radius of curvature is more exact. If the curve in a 'small' section is allow to continue with the same curvature it would form a circle. that PRETEND circle would have an exact radius. That is the radius of curvature.
The stomach has a greater and lesser curvature. The greater curvature is the more lateral of the two.
The cervical curvature is considered a secondary curvature of the spine. It develops as a compensatory curve to help maintain balance and support the weight of the head.
define the term centre of curvature