Questions tagged [conic-sections]

For questions about circles, ellipses, hyperbolas, and parabolas. These curves are the result of intersecting a cone with a plane.

A conic section is a smooth planar curve that is the result of intersecting a cone with a plane. There are commonly four conic sections: circles, ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas.

We can construct these conic sections analytically. The solutions to the equation $x^2+y^2=z^2$ give us a cone in three-dimensional space. An plane in three-dimensional space that goes through a point $p=(x_0,y_0,z_0)$ and has normal vector $\langle a,b,c \rangle$ is given by the equation

$$a(x-x_0)+b(y-y_0)+c(z-z_0)=0\,.$$

Finding the common solutions to the equation of the cone and equation of the plane for various choices of $p$ and normal vector will—after a change in coordinates to write them as planar curves—lead you to the (potentially) familiar equations

  • Circle: $x^2+y^2 = r^2$
  • Ellipse: $ax^2 + b y^2 = r^2$, where $a,b>0$
  • Parabola: $ax^2 +by = r^2$, where $a\neq 0$
  • Hyperbola: $ax^2 - by^2 = r^2$, where $a,b>0$

There are also geometric constructions of the conic sections. For example, a circle is the set of all points that are a fixed distance from a given points. An ellipse is the set of all points .... The construction of Dandelin spheres (see Wikipedia) unifies the analytic and geometric constructions of conic sections.

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Identify and put conic in standard form: $4x^2 - 16x + 3y^2 + 24y + 52 = 0$

How do I put this conic in standard form and identify it? $$4x^2 - 16x + 3y^2 + 24y + 52 = 0$$
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Foci of Ellipse lies on Hyperbola and vice-versa

Let the foci of the hyperbola $\frac{{{x^2}}}{{{A^2}}} - \frac{{{y^2}}}{{{B^2}}} = 1$ , (A,B > 0) be vertices of ellipse $\frac{{{x^2}}}{{{a^2}}} + \frac{{{y^2}}}{{{b^2}}} = 1$ , (a, b > 0) and foci of ellipse be vertices of hyperbola. Let…
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Find locus of mid-point of chord of circle

I am working through a pure maths book as a hobby and am struggling with the very last part of the question below. I give the whole of the question just in case it proves relevant to the answer. A circle passes through the points A, B and C which…
Steblo
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Equivalent definitions for the diameter of a hyperbola

I am studying the (somewhat old-fashioned) "Analytical Conics" by D.M.Y. Sommerville (3rd edition, 1933). (It's fascinating, but the order of presentation of material makes it come across as muddled sometimes). I have found this definition in…
Prime Mover
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Three points P,Q,R taken on ellipsoid such that line joining them to origin are mutually perpendicular

Three points $P,Q,R$ taken on ellipsoid $\dfrac{x^2}{a^2} + \dfrac{y^2}{b^2}+ \dfrac{z^2}{c^2} = 1$ so that lines joining $P,Q,R$ to origin are mutually perpendicular. Prove that plane $PQR$ touches a fixed sphere. Attempt : I assumed the points…
goku
  • 99
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How to prove distance from foci on an ellipse is equal to twice the semi-major axis (for specific ellipse)

Prove that for any point (x,y) on the conic, the sum of the distances to the two foci is always twice the semi-major axis. I know that this can be proven in general for all ellipses but the practice question specifically asks for this to be proven…
user773349
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Ellipsoid in n-dimension

Is the ellipsoid's equation in n-dimension looks like this? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipsoid#Standard_equation Like $x_1^2/r_1^2 + x_2^2/r_2^2 + ... + x_n^2/r_n^2 = 1$
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Eccentricity of Pluto

With an eccentricity of $0.25$, pluto's orbit is the most eccentric in the solar system. The length of the minor axis of its orbit is approximately $1×10^{10}$. Find the distance between Pluto and the sun at perihelion and at the aphelion {placing…
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Hyperbola asymptotes from conic general equation

If I have the coefficients of the following equation: $$AX^2 + BXY + CY^2 + DX + EY + F = 0$$ And I know it's a hyperbola, how can I get the equations for the asymptotes with respect to the coefficients A, B, C, D, E, and F? i.e. similar to this…
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Basic question about this formula related to the ellipse

In http://mathproofs.blogspot.com/2005/07/mapping-square-to-circle.html, there is a derivation of the mapping from a unit square to a unit circle. Looking up wikipedia tells me the canonical form of an ellipse is: $\frac{x^2}{a^2} + \frac{y^2}{b^2}…
Voltaire
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Parametric Parabola: Axis of Symmetry and Tangent at Vertex

Given a general parabola in parametric form $$\big(at^2+bt, ct^2+dt\big)$$ what are the equations of the axis of symmetry, as well as the tangent at the vertex? Using standard but rather tedious algebraic expansion, the following can be worked…
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Finding Eccentricity from the rotating ellipse formula

I see that from a normal ellipse formula, we can acquire the eccentricity via this formula here. However, for this formula (1): $A(x − h)^2 + B(x − h)(y − k) + C(y − k)^2 = 1$ When parameter $B = 0$, we would have normal ellipse, and the formula…
Karl
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Parametrization of an arbitrary conic/ellipse

I have the coefficients for a conic (I actually know that it is an ellipse) in the form $$Ax^2 + Bxy + Cy^2 + Dx + Ey + F =0$$ Is there an efficient algorithm which returns the parametrization of the eclipse, i.e., $\langle x(t), y(t) \rangle?$
Jbag1212
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Finding area of the parallelogram enclosing the ellipse.

Line $L_1$ having slope $9$,is parallel to line $L_2$. Also $L_3$ having slope $\frac {-1}{25}$,is parallel to line $L_4$. All these lines touch the ellipse $\frac {x^2}{25}+\frac{y^2}{9}=1$. Find the area of the parallelogram formed by these…
sonu
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How to tell the difference between a parabola and a hyperbola by looking

If you are given a curve and you are told that it is either a parabola or a hyperbola, how can you tell definitively which one it is? No coordinates provided. Geometrical method preferred, i.e. visual inspection, drawing lines, or comparing…