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axiality

Axiality is the quality of exhibiting symmetry about a fixed axis, a line around which rotations leave an object or system unchanged. The concept is used across geometry, chemistry, and physics to describe how an object relates to a central, defining axis.

In geometry, axial symmetry means invariance under rotations around a particular line. If every rotation about

In chemistry, axial symmetry concerns the presence of rotational axes in molecules. Molecules can possess Cn

In physics and engineering, axial symmetry simplifies problems in cylindrical coordinates. Systems such as pipes, pipelines,

Axiality, therefore, denotes the presence and strength of an axis of rotational symmetry, shaping both theoretical

the
axis
maps
the
object
onto
itself,
the
axis
provides
infinite
rotational
symmetry
(often
denoted
as
a
C∞
axis).
More
commonly,
a
finite
rotational
symmetry
is
described
as
an
n-fold
axis
(Cn),
where
rotations
by
360/n
degrees
leave
the
object
unchanged.
Cylinders
and
cones
are
classic
examples
of
axial
symmetry,
since
rotating
them
about
their
central
axis
yields
the
same
shape.
axes,
indicating
n-fold
rotational
symmetry
around
an
axis.
The
concept
helps
classify
molecular
shapes
and
point
groups.
A
related
idea
is
axial
chirality,
where
restricted
rotation
around
a
bond
creates
non-superimposable
mirror
images,
or
atropisomers,
due
to
the
axis
created
by
the
rotating
bond.
Axes
of
symmetry
in
molecules
influence
physical
properties,
spectra,
and
reactivity,
and
are
contrasted
with
planes
of
symmetry
or
centers
of
inversion
in
symmetry
analysis.
rotational
bodies,
or
gravitational
and
electric
fields
around
long
rods
often
admit
axial
symmetry,
reducing
three‑dimensional
problems
to
two
dimensions.
descriptions
and
practical
applications
across
disciplines.
See
also
symmetry,
axis,
Cn
axis,
axial
chirality.