Posts Tagged ‘lower’
Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
How to Calculate the Angle of Depression
Description
A detailed tutorial on calculating the angle of depression. Step by step tutorial including several examples of the angle of depression for reference.
Overview
The angle of depression is the angle at which a person must be looking in order to see an object that is lower than the observer. Typically, the angle of elevation is a term used in trigonometry, when calculating angles of a right triangle. In a right triangle, the angle of elevation is the angle between the hypotenuse and the base, when the base of the triangle is actually located at the top of the figure. It can be calculated by using SOHCAHTOA and solving for the sine, cosine, or tangent.
Tags: angle, calculate, cosine, depression, horizontal, line, lower, object, point, right, sine, SOHCAHTOA, tangent, triangle, trig, trigonometry
Posted in Trigonometry | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 17th, 2009
Introduction to Half-Planes
Description
A detailed tutorial on half-planes. Step by step tutorial including several examples of half-planes for reference.
Overview
A half-plane is simply half a plane, that includes all the lines on half of the plane and sometimes the points. If the plane includes the points, it is a closed half-plane. If it doesn’t, then it is an open half-plane. The most common half planes are upper, lower, right, and left planes, where that side of the plane is all that is included. However, there are many other kinds of half planes that are all a variety of diagonal half-planes.
Tags: bottom, closed, Geometry, half, half-plane, left, lines, lower, open, plane, points, region, right, top, upper
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »
Friday, November 13th, 2009
How to Find the Interquartile Range
Description
A detailed tutorial on how to find the interquartile range. Step by step tutorial including several examples of the interquartile range for reference.
Overview
The interquartile range is the range of the data between the lower or first quartile and the upper or third quartile. The interquartile range is not the whole data set – it is actually only half of the data set, although not a common half – the first and last quarter of the data is not included in the interquartile range. To find the interquartile range, all you must do is find all the quartiles, and then find the different between the upper quartile and lower quartile.
Tags: data, First, half, interquartile, lower, median, quarter, quartile, range, second, set, statistics, third, upper
Posted in Statistics | No Comments »
Friday, November 13th, 2009
Definition of a Quartile
Description
A detailed tutorial on the definition of a quartile. Step by step tutorial including several examples of the definition of a quartile for reference.
Overview
A quartile is a value that separates out statistical data. There are three quartiles, and they work together to separate data out into four different parts. The first quartile, called Q1, is the lower quartile. It is the 25th percentile of data – that is, the median of the median of the total amount of data, and the lowest count in a data set. The second quartile, called Q2, is the median of the entire data set. It is sometimes referred to as the middle value. The third quartile, called Q3, is the upper quartile. It is the 75th percentile of data – that is, the median of the median of the total amount of data, and the highest count in a data set.
Tags: 25, 50, 75, data, First, lower, median, middle, parts, percentile, Q1, Q2, Q3, quartile, second, separate, set, statistical, statistics, third, upper
Posted in Statistics | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
How to Make a Box-and-Whisker Plot
Description
A detailed tutorial on how to make a box-and-whisker plot. Step by step tutorial including several examples of how to make a box-and-whisker plot for reference.
Overview
A box-and-whisker plot is named for it’s resemblance to a cat’s face – the box is the face of the cat, and the lines extending out from either side are known as whiskers. Sometimes box-and-whisker plots are simply called box plots. They are used to graph sets of numbers according to five values: the highest value, known as the maximum, the second highest value, known as the upper quartile, the median, or the middle, the second lowest value, known as the lower quartile, and the lowest value, known as the minimum. The box centers around the median and the whiskers extend out to the other numbers.
Tags: algebra, box, box-and-whisker, boxplot, diagram, graph, highest, line, lower, lowest, maximum, median, middle, minimum, plot, quartile, upper, value, whisker
Posted in Algebra | No Comments »
Thursday, November 5th, 2009
Upper and Lower Triangular Matrices
Description
A detailed tutorial on upper and lower triangular matrices. Step by step tutorial including several examples of triangular matrices for reference.
Overview
A triangular matrix is a kind of square matrix where an element above or below the main diagonal is 0. This gives the true elements of the matrix a triangle shape, which is how it got its name. An upper triangular matrix is sometimes called a right triangular matrix. The matrix is up in the right upper corner, and the 0 element is in the lower left corner. A lower triangular matrix is sometimes called a left triangular matrix. The matrix is in the left bottom corner, and the 0 element is in the upper right corner.
Tags: 0, algebra, bottom, element, left, lower, matrices, matrix, right, square, top, triangle, triangular, upper, zero
Posted in Algebra | No Comments »