User Contributed Dictionary
- Plural of shape
Verb
shapes- third-person singular of shape
Extensive Definition
The shape (OE. sceap
Eng.
created thing) of an object located in some space refers to the
part of space occupied by the object as determined by its external
boundary — abstracting from other aspects the object may have such
as its colour, content, or the substance of which it is composed,
as well as from the object's position and orientation in space, and
its size.
Simple two-dimensional shapes can be described by
basic geometry such as
points,
line,
curves, plane,
and so on. Shapes that occur in the physical world are often quite
complex; they may be arbitrarily curved as studied by differential
geometry, or fractal, as for plants or
coastlines).
Rigid shape definition
In geometry, two subsets of a
Euclidean
space have the same shape if one can be transformed to the
other by a combination of translations,
rotations (together
also called rigid transformations), and uniform
scalings. In other words, the shape of a set is all the
geometrical information that is invariant to position (including
rotation) and scale.
Having the same shape is an equivalence
relation, and accordingly a precise mathematical definition of
the notion of shape can be given as being an equivalence
class of subsets of a Euclidean space having the same
shape.
Shapes of physical objects are equal if the
subsets of space these objects occupy satisfy the definition above.
In particular, the shape does not depend on the size of the object
nor on changes in orientation/direction. However, a mirror image
could be called a different shape. Shape may change if the object
is scaled non uniformly. For example, a sphere becomes an ellipsoid when scaled
differently in the vertical and horizontal direction. In other
words, preserving axes of symmetry (if they exist) is
important for preserving shapes. Also, shape is not necessary
determined by only the outer boundary of an object. For example, a
solid ice cube and a second ice cube containing an inner cavity
(air bubble) do not necessarily have the same shape, even though
the outer boundary is identical.
Objects that can be transformed into each other
only by rigid transformations and mirroring are congruent.
An object is therefore congruent to its mirror image
(even if it is not symmetric), but not to a scaled version. Objects
that have the same shape or one has the same shape as the other's
mirror image (or both if they are themselves symmetric) are called
geometrically
similar. Thus congruent objects are always geometrically
similar, but geometrical similarity additionally allows uniform
scaling.
Non-rigid shape definition
A more flexible definition of shape takes into
consideration the fact that we often deal with deformable shapes in
reality (e.g. a person in different postures, a tree bending in the
wind or a hand with different finger positions). By allowing also
isometric (or near-isometric) deformations like bending, the
intrinsic geometry of the object will stay the same, while
subparts might be located at very different positions in space.
This definition uses the fact, that geodesics (curves measured
along the surface of the object) stay the same, independent of the
isometric
embedding. This means
that the distance from a finger to a toe of a person measured along
the body is always the same, no matter how the body is posed. An
ant climbing a bendable plant will not notice how the wind moves it
around, as only bending and no stretching is involved. It is true
that when a body is bent, the wind moves around it, not through
it.
Colloquial shape definition
Shape can also be more loosely defined as "the
appearance of something, especially its outline". This definition
is consistent with the above, in that the shape of a set does not
depend on its position, size or orientation. However, it does not
always imply an exact mathematical transformation. For example it
is common to talk of star-shaped objects even though the number of
points of the star is not defined.
Shape analysis
The modern definition of shape has arisen in the field of statistical shape analysis. In particular Procrustes analysis, which is a technique for analysing the statistical distributions of shapes. These techniques have been used to examine the alignments of random points.External links
shapes in German: Form (Geometrie)
shapes in Spanish: Figura (geometría)
shapes in Estonian: Geomeetriline kujund
shapes in Esperanto: Geometria figuro
shapes in Scottish Gaelic: Cumadh
shapes in Korean: 도형
shapes in Italian: Forma geometrica
shapes in Japanese: 図形
shapes in Polish: Figura płaska
shapes in Russian: Фигура (геометрия)
shapes in Simple English: Shape
shapes in Swedish: Geometrisk figur
shapes in Yiddish: געאמעטרישע פארעם
shapes in Chinese: 形狀