Home

tórico

Tórico is an adjective used in Spanish to denote toric or torus-related properties. It derives from the Latin torus, referring to donut-shaped, toroidal geometry. In technical contexts, tórico describes objects or concepts that involve or resemble a torus.

In mathematics, toric (tórico) geometry studies toric varieties—algebraic varieties that contain an algebraic torus as a

In optics and vision science, toric lenses (lentes tóricas) are cylindrical lenses designed to correct astigmatism.

Beyond mathematics and vision, the term appears in other technical areas where torus-shaped or torus-related properties

See also: torus, toric geometry, toric varieties, astigmatism, toric lenses, toric intraocular lenses.

dense
subset
and
admit
a
highly
structured
combinatorial
description
in
terms
of
fans
and
cones
in
a
lattice.
Toric
varieties
provide
a
bridge
between
combinatorics
and
algebraic
geometry,
and
include
familiar
spaces
such
as
projective
spaces
and
products
of
projective
lines.
The
language
of
toric
geometry
ties
geometric
features
to
discrete
data,
enabling
concrete
constructions
and
computations.
They
have
different
refractive
powers
along
different
meridians
and
are
described
by
a
spherical
power,
a
cylindrical
power,
and
an
axis
angle.
Toric
designs
extend
to
contact
lenses
and
intraocular
lenses
used
after
cataract
surgery,
aiming
to
compensate
for
irregular
curvature
of
the
cornea.
are
relevant.
The
common
thread
is
the
association
with
toroidal
geometry,
symmetry,
or
correction
of
anisotropic
curvature.