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In mathematics, a spherical conic or sphero-conic is a curve on the sphere, the intersection of the sphere with a concentric elliptic cone. It is the spherical analog of a conic section (ellipse, parabola, or hyperbola) in the plane, and as in the planar case, a spherical conic can be defined as the locus of points the sum or difference of ...
The elliptic cones intersect the sphere in spherical conics. Conical coordinates , sometimes called sphero-conal or sphero-conical coordinates, are a three-dimensional orthogonal coordinate system consisting of concentric spheres (described by their radius r ) and by two families of perpendicular elliptic cones, aligned along the z - and x ...
Conic In normal aspect, conic (or conical) projections map meridians as straight lines, and parallels as arcs of circles. Pseudoconical In normal aspect, pseudoconical projections represent the central meridian as a straight line, other meridians as complex curves, and parallels as circular arcs. Azimuthal
Coordinates from a spherical datum can be transformed to an equidistant conic projection with rectangular coordinates by using the following formulas, [4] where λ is the longitude, λ 0 the reference longitude, φ the latitude, φ 0 the reference latitude, and φ 1 and φ 2 the standard parallels:
The equation for a conic section with apex at the origin and tangent to the y axis is + (+) = alternately = + (+) where R is the radius of curvature at x = 0. This formulation is used in geometric optics to specify oblate elliptical ( K > 0 ), spherical ( K = 0 ), prolate elliptical ( 0 > K > −1 ), parabolic ( K = −1 ), and hyperbolic ( K ...
In geometry, a hypercone (or spherical cone) is the figure in the 4-dimensional Euclidean space represented by the equation x 2 + y 2 + z 2 − w 2 = 0. {\displaystyle x^{2}+y^{2}+z^{2}-w^{2}=0.} It is a quadric surface, and is one of the possible 3- manifolds which are 4-dimensional equivalents of the conical surface in 3 dimensions.
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More generally, when the directrix is an ellipse, or any conic section, and the apex is an arbitrary point not on the plane of , one obtains an elliptic cone [4] (also called a conical quadric or quadratic cone), [5] which is a special case of a quadric surface. [4] [5]