The parabolic heat equation is a partial differential equation that models the diffusion of heat (i.e. temperature) through a medium through time. More information, including a spreadsheet to solve the heat equation in Excel, is given at the related link.
What equation are you referring to
no there is not
That depends what the original equation is.
Hey look, a bunny!
Electric Heaters contain a heating element that reaches a high temperature. The element is usually packaged inside a glass envelope resembling a light bulb and with a parabolic reflector to direct the energy output away from the body of the heater. The element emits infrared radiationthat travels through air or space until it hits an absorbing surface(parabolic reflector), where it is partially converted to heat and partially reflected. This heat directly warms people and objects in the room, rather than warming the air.
I believe this question refers to the fact that the partial differential equation that describes heat transfer is classified as a parabolic equation. So you would see these two terms together when people talk about the "parabolic heat equation" (meaning the heat equation, which is a parabolic equation): <math>u_t = k(u_{xx} + u_{yy} + u_{zz})</math>
The parabolic heat equation is a partial differential equation that models the diffusion of heat (i.e. temperature) through a medium through time. More information, including a spreadsheet to solve the heat equation in Excel, is given at the related link.
It's a trap.
That one.
square
Assuming that the 2 in "5x2" is a power (5x2), then no, this is not a linear equation. It is a parabolic equation.
A: For the same reason a heater is parabolic to reflect heat, For the antenna the opposite is true to focus the incoming waves
the square
Bar graphs and line graphs do not. Straight line, parabolic, and hyperbolic graphs are graphs of an equation.
on the left side of the equation
uhm idfk lol
A quadratic can be used to represent many different things, such as parabolic/satellite dishes and the flight of ballistic projectiles.