Logarythmic said:
Yeah, but I mean
x = r \cos \theta, y = r \sin \theta, z = z
is an parametric equation for a cylinder. And my example is a parametric equation for..? For what?
No, they are not. Those are the equations for changing from cylindrical coordinates to Cartesian coordinates in R
3, just as Dextercioby said. IF you put restrictions on them, such as 0\le \theta \le 2\pi, 0\le r \le 1, 0\le z\le 1,
then they are parametric equations describing a cylinder of radius 1, length 1. If you set 0\le \theta \le 2\pi, [itexr = 1[/itex], -\infty\le z\le\infty, then you have parametric equations for the
surface of an infinite cylinder.
The equations you give, both here and in your original post can take on
any values for x, y, z because u, v, \theta can have any values. If you want to describe a specific
region in R
3, then you must put restrictions on them. If you want to describe a
surface then, since a surface is two-dimensional, you must have x, y, z given in terms of
two parameters, not three.