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1. On Reciprocal Figures, Frames, and Diagrams of Forces
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
The reciprocal figures treated of in this paper are plane rectilinear figures, such that every line in one figure is perpendicular to the corresponding line in the other, and lines which meet in a point in one figure correspond to lines which form a closed polygon in the other.
By turning one of the figures round 90°, the corresponding lines become parallel, and are more easily recognised. The practical use of these figures depends on the proposition known as the “Polygon of Forces.” If we suppose one of the reciprocal figures to represent a system of points acted on by tensions or pressures along the lines of the figure, then, if the forces which act along these lines are represented in magnitude, as they are in direction, by the corresponding lines of the other reciprocal figure, every point of the first figure will be in equilibrium.
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- Proceedings 1869-70
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1872
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