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quadratic curves
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(Topic)
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We want to determine the graphical representant of the general bivariate quadratic equation
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(1) |
where $A,\,B,\,C,\,D,\,E,\,F$ are known real numbers and $A^2+B^2+C^2 > 0$ .
If $C \neq 0$ , we will rotate the coordinate system, getting new coordinate axes $x'$ and $y'$ , such that the equation (1) transforms into a new one having no more the mixed term $x'y'$ . Let the rotation angle be $\alpha$ to the anticlockwise (positive) direction so that the $x'$ - and $y'$ -axes form the angles $\alpha$ and $\alpha+90^\circ$ with the original $x$ -axis, respectively. Then there is the connection
between the new and old coordinates (see rotation matrix). Substituting these expressions into (1) it becomes
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(2) |
where
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(3) |
It's always possible to determine $\alpha$ such that $(B-A)\sin2\alpha = -2C\cos2\alpha$ , i.e. that $$\tan2\alpha = \frac{2C}{A-B}$$ for $A \neq B$ and $\alpha = 45^\circ$ for the case $A = B$ . Then the term $2Px'y'$ vanishes in (2), which becomes, dropping out the apostrophes,
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(4) |
- If none of the coefficients $M$ and $M$ equal zero, one can remove the first degree terms of (4) by first writing it as $$M\left(x+\frac{G}{M}\right)^2+N\left(y+\frac{H}{N}\right)^2 = \frac{G^2}{M}+\frac{H^2}{N}-F$$ and then translating the origin to the point $\left(-\frac{G}{M},\,-\frac{H}{N}\right)$ , when we obtain the equation of the form
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(5) |
If $M$ and $M$ have the same sign, then in order that (5) could have a counterpart in the plane, the sign must be the same as the sign of $K$ ; then the counterpart is the ellipse $$\frac{x^2}{\left(\sqrt{|K/M|}\right)^2}+\frac{y^2}{\left(\sqrt{|K/N|}\right)^2} = 1.$$ If $M$ and $N$ have opposite signs and $K \neq 0$ , then the curve (5) correspondingly is one of the hyperbolas $$\frac{x^2}{\left(\sqrt{|K/M|}\right)^2}-\frac{y^2}{\left(\sqrt{|K/N|}\right)^2} = \pm1,$$ which for $K = 0$ is reduced to a pair of intersecting lines.
- If one of $M$ and $N$ , e.g. the latter, is zero, the equation (4) may be written
i.e.
Translating now the origin to the point $\left(-\frac{G}{M},\,\frac{G^2-MF}{2HM}\right)$ the equation changes to
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(6) |
For $H \neq 0$ , this is the equation $y = -\frac{M}{2H}x^2$ of a parabola, but for $H = 0$ , of a double line $x^2 = 0$ .
The kind of the quadratic curve (1) can also be found out directly from this original form of the equation. Namely, from the formulae (3) between the old and the new coefficients one may derive the connection
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(7) |
when one first adds and subtracts them obtaining $$M+N = A+B,$$ $$M-N = (A-B)\cos2\alpha+2C\sin2\alpha,$$ $$2P = (A-B)\sin2\alpha+2C\cos2\alpha.$$ Two latter of these give $$(M-N)^2+4P^2 = (A-B)^2+4C^2,$$ and when one subtracts this from the equation $(M+N)^2 = (A+B)^2$ , the result is (7), which due to the choice of $\alpha$ is simply
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(8) |
Thus the curve $Ax^2+By^2+2Cxy+2Dx+2Ey+F = 0$ is, when it is real,
- for $AB-C^2 > 0$ an ellipse,
- for $AB-C^2 < 0$ a hyperbola or two intersecting lines,
- for $AB-C^2 = 0$ a parabola or a double line.
- 1
- L. LINDELÖF: Analyyttisen geometrian oppikirja. Kolmas painos. Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura, Helsinki (1924).
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"quadratic curves" is owned by pahio. [ full author list (2) ]
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Cross-references: connection, parabola, lines, reduced, curve, opposite, plane, point, origin, degree, coefficients, vanishes, term, expressions, rotation matrix, positive, angle, rotation, mixed term, Transforms, equation, coordinate, coordinate system, rotate, real numbers, quadratic equation
There are 4 references to this entry.
This is version 10 of quadratic curves, born on 2008-03-22, modified 2008-03-28.
Object id is 10437, canonical name is QuadraticCurves.
Accessed 2355 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 51N20 (Geometry :: Analytic and descriptive geometry :: Euclidean analytic geometry) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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