Difference between revisions of "Conic section"
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== Definitions of conic sections in terms of foci and directrices == | == Definitions of conic sections in terms of foci and directrices == | ||
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== Definitions of conic sections in terms of Cartesian coordinates == | == Definitions of conic sections in terms of Cartesian coordinates == | ||
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== See Also == | == See Also == | ||
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[[Category:Definition]] | [[Category:Definition]] | ||
[[Category:Geometry]] | [[Category:Geometry]] | ||
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Revision as of 14:43, 1 December 2015
A conic section is any of the geometric figures that can arise when a plane intersects a cone. (In fact, one usually considers a "two-ended cone," that is, two congruent right circular cones placed tip to tip so that their axes align.) As is clear from their definition, the conic sections are all plane curves, and every conic section can be described in Cartesian coordinates by a polynomial equation of degree two or less.
Contents
Classification of conic sections
All conic sections fall into the following categories:
Nondegenerate conic sections
- A circle is the conic section formed when the cutting plane is parallel to the base of the cone or equivalently perpendicular to the axis. (This is really just a special case of the ellipse -- see the next bullet point.)
- An ellipse is formed if the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis that is larger than the angle between the element of the cone and the axis.
- A parabola is formed when the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis that is equal to the angle between the element of the cone and the axis.
- An hyperbola is formed when the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis that is smaller than the angle between the element of the cone and the axis.
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Degenerate conic sections
If the cutting plane passes through the vertex of the cone, the result is a degenerate conic section. Degenerate conics fall into three categories:
- If the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis that is larger than the angle between the element of the cone and the axis then the plane intersects the cone only in the vertex, i.e. the resulting section is a single point. This is a degenerate ellipse.
- If the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis equal to the angle between the element of the cone and the axis then the plane is tangent to the cone and the resulting section is a line. This is a degenerate parabola.
- If the cutting plane makes an angle with the axis that is smaller than then angle between the element of the cone and the axis then the resulting section is two intersecting lines. This is a degenerate hyperbola.
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There are alternate (but equivalent) definitions of every conic section. We present them here:
Definitions of conic sections in terms of foci and directrices
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Definitions of conic sections in terms of Cartesian coordinates
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