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  2. Degenerate conic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degenerate_conic

    In geometry, a degenerate conic is a conic (a second-degree plane curve, defined by a polynomial equation of degree two) that fails to be an irreducible curve.This means that the defining equation is factorable over the complex numbers (or more generally over an algebraically closed field) as the product of two linear polynomials.

  3. Degeneracy (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degeneracy_(mathematics)

    A degenerate conic is a conic section (a second-degree plane curve, defined by a polynomial equation of degree two) that fails to be an irreducible curve. A point is a degenerate circle, namely one with radius 0. [1] The line is a degenerate case of a parabola if the parabola resides on a tangent plane.

  4. Five points determine a conic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_points_determine_a_conic

    Being tangent to five given lines also determines a conic, by projective duality, but from the algebraic point of view tangency to a line is a quadratic constraint, so naive dimension counting yields 2 5 = 32 conics tangent to five given lines, of which 31 must be ascribed to degenerate conics, as described in fudge factors in enumerative ...

  5. Matrix representation of conic sections - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_representation_of...

    The vertices of a central conic can be determined by calculating the intersections of the conic and its axes — in other words, by solving the system consisting of the quadratic conic equation and the linear equation for alternately one or the other of the axes. Two or no vertices are obtained for each axis, since, in the case of the hyperbola ...

  6. Linear system of conics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_system_of_conics

    In algebraic geometry, the conic sections in the projective plane form a linear system of dimension five, as one sees by counting the constants in the degree two equations. The condition to pass through a given point P imposes a single linear condition, so that conics C through P form a linear system of dimension 4.

  7. Conic section - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conic_section

    These turn out to be the solutions of a third degree equation. given the degenerate conic , identify the two, possibly coincident, lines constituting it. intersect each identified line with either one of the two original conics. the points of intersection will represent the solutions to the initial equation system.

  8. Quadric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadric

    In mathematics, a quadric or quadric surface (quadric hypersurface in higher dimensions), is a generalization of conic sections (ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas).It is a hypersurface (of dimension D) in a (D + 1)-dimensional space, and it is defined as the zero set of an irreducible polynomial of degree two in D + 1 variables; for example, D = 1 in the case of conic sections.

  9. Non-Desarguesian plane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-Desarguesian_plane

    The set of points of intersection of corresponding lines of two pencils which are projectively, but not perspectively, related is known as a Steiner conic. If the pencils are perspectively related, the conic is degenerate. The set of points whose coordinates satisfy an irreducible homogeneous equation of degree two.