U+2B2E Black Vertical Ellipse
U+2B2E was added in Unicode version 5.1 in 2008. It belongs to the block
This character is a Other Symbol and is commonly used, that is, in no specific script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it acts as Other Neutral. When changing direction it is not mirrored. The word that U+2B2E forms with similar adjacent characters prevents a line break inside it.
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
In mathematics, an ellipse is a plane curve surrounding two focal points, such that for all points on the curve, the sum of the two distances to the focal points is a constant. It generalizes a circle, which is the special type of ellipse in which the two focal points are the same. The elongation of an ellipse is measured by its eccentricity , a number ranging from (the limiting case of a circle) to (the limiting case of infinite elongation, no longer an ellipse but a parabola).
An ellipse has a simple algebraic solution for its area, but for its perimeter (also known as circumference), integration is required to obtain an exact solution.
Analytically, the equation of a standard ellipse centered at the origin with width and height is:
Assuming , the foci are for . The standard parametric equation is:
Ellipses are the closed type of conic section: a plane curve tracing the intersection of a cone with a plane (see figure). Ellipses have many similarities with the other two forms of conic sections, parabolas and hyperbolas, both of which are open and unbounded. An angled cross section of a right circular cylinder is also an ellipse.
An ellipse may also be defined in terms of one focal point and a line outside the ellipse called the directrix: for all points on the ellipse, the ratio between the distance to the focus and the distance to the directrix is a constant. This constant ratio is the above-mentioned eccentricity:
Ellipses are common in physics, astronomy and engineering. For example, the orbit of each planet in the Solar System is approximately an ellipse with the Sun at one focus point (more precisely, the focus is the barycenter of the Sun–planet pair). The same is true for moons orbiting planets and all other systems of two astronomical bodies. The shapes of planets and stars are often well described by ellipsoids. A circle viewed from a side angle looks like an ellipse: that is, the ellipse is the image of a circle under parallel or perspective projection. The ellipse is also the simplest Lissajous figure formed when the horizontal and vertical motions are sinusoids with the same frequency: a similar effect leads to elliptical polarization of light in optics.
The name, ἔλλειψις (élleipsis, "omission"), was given by Apollonius of Perga in his Conics.
Representations
System | Representation |
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Nº | 11054 |
UTF-8 | E2 AC AE |
UTF-16 | 2B 2E |
UTF-32 | 00 00 2B 2E |
URL-Quoted | %E2%AC%AE |
HTML hex reference | ⬮ |
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake | ⬮ |
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes) | 81 38 A8 38 |
Elsewhere
Complete Record
Property | Value |
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5.1 (2008) | |
BLACK VERTICAL ELLIPSE | |
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Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A | |
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0 | |
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NA | |
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Other | |
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neutral | |
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No_Joining_Group | |
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not a number | |
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U |