Conic Sections: Difference between revisions
From DT Online
(Added text and images) |
m (Added to definitions) |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
| <span style="color:#B00000"> | | <span style="color:#B00000"> | ||
* The curve produced when a secton is taken across a right circular cone at an angle to the base circle, and intersecting the generators on both sides. | * The curve produced when a secton is taken across a right circular cone at an angle to the base circle, and intersecting the generators on both sides. | ||
* An Ellipse is also the result of taking a section across a cylinder at at angle to its base. | |||
| [[File:Conics-ElipseTrans.png|350px|right]] | | [[File:Conics-ElipseTrans.png|350px|right]] | ||
|- | |- |
Revision as of 08:49, 4 April 2015
A Cone can be described as the Locus of all lines joining points on the circumference of a ‘Base Circle’ to a point, or ‘Apex’, above it. If the Apex lies perpendicularly above the centre of the base circle it is known as a ‘right cone’ and if not, it is an ‘oblique cone’.
A right circular cone is a Solid of Revolution and can be produced by rotating a right angle triangle around one of the sides opposite its hypotenuse. The hypotenuse generates the surface of a cone as it sweeps round the central ‘Axis’. Any line joining the Apex to the Base Circle is known as a ‘Generator’. Generators can continue through the Apex to produce a second cone opposite to the first, creating a ‘Double Cone,’ and each Cone could extend beyond he Base Circles to infinity.
A right circular cone can be sliced across in various ways to produce a number of Conic Sections. These are curves with particular mathematical properties and which are used in engineering design - e.g. cam profiles and arch bridge design.
Ellipse |
|
|
Parabola |
|
|
Hyperbola |
|
|
Circle |
|
|
Triangle |
|