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AN AIRPORT

INTRODUCTION
We have made an airport in which we have made a runway which is rectangular in shape, a terminal which is a cuboid, hangers where planes are parked which is like tunnel hemisphere, a control tower which is cylinder, a parking lot and air socks which is like a cone.

SHAPES USED IN PROJECT


CUBOIDE:

In geometry, a cube is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each vertex. The cube can also be called a regular hexahedron and is one of the five Platonic solids. It is a special kind of square prism, of rectangular parallelepiped and of trigonal trapezohedron. The cube is dual to the octahedron. It has cubical symmetry (also called octahedral symmetry). It is special by being a cuboid and a rhombohedron.

RECTANGULAR:

In Euclidean plane geometry, a rectangle is any quadrilateral with four right angles. Another name is equiangular quadrilateral, since equiangular means that all of its angles are equal (360/4 = 90). It can also be defined as a parallelogram containing a right angle. The term oblong is occasionally used to refer to a nonsquare rectangle. A rectangle with vertices ABCD would be denoted as ABCD.

HEMISPHERE:

A hemisphere is half of a sphere. It has 1 edge, 1 face and no vertex. lot of other thing have hemisphere in the name. Different halves of the earth is a hemisphere. CYLINDER: A cylinder is one of the most basic curvilinear geometric shapes, the surface formed by the points at a fixed distance from a given line segment, the axis of the cylinder. The solid enclosed by this surface and by two planes perpendicular to the axis is also called a cylinder. The surface area and the volume of a cylinder have been known since deep antiquity.

CONE:

A cone is an -dimensional geometric shape that tapers smoothly from a base (usually flat and circular) to a point called the apex or vertex. Formally, it is the solid figure formed by the locus of all straight line segments that join the apex to the base. The term "cone" is sometimes used to refer to the surface or the lateral surface of this solid figure (the lateral surface of a cone is equal to the surface minus the base). In common usage in elementary geometry, cones are assumed to be right circular, where right means that the axis passes through the centre of the base (suitably defined) at right angles to its plane, and circular means that the base is a circle. Contrasted with right cones are oblique cones, in which the axis does not pass perpendicularly through the centre of the base. In general, however, the base may be any shape, and the apex may lie anywhere (though it is often assumed that the base is bounded and has finite area, and that the apex lies outside the plane of the base). For example, a pyramid is technically a cone with a polygonal base.

GROUP MEMBERS:
Balaj Khalid (Group Leader )
Omar Mukhtar Sandeep Kumar

Ammar Masood
Mobeen Mudassir.

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