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  2. Matrix representation of conic sections - Wikipedia

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

    In mathematics, the matrix representation of conic sections permits the tools of linear algebra to be used in the study of conic sections. It provides easy ways to calculate a conic section's axis , vertices , tangents and the pole and polar relationship between points and lines of the plane determined by the conic.

  3. Conic section - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conic_section

    A conic is the curve obtained as the intersection of a plane, called the cutting plane, with the surface of a double cone (a cone with two nappes).It is usually assumed that the cone is a right circular cone for the purpose of easy description, but this is not required; any double cone with some circular cross-section will suffice.

  4. Conic constant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conic_constant

    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 ...

  5. Five points determine a conic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_points_determine_a_conic

    requiring a conic to pass through a point imposes a linear condition on the coordinates: for a fixed (,), the equation + + + + + = is a linear equation in (,,,,,); by dimension counting , five constraints (that the curve passes through five points) are necessary to specify a conic, as each constraint cuts the dimension of possibilities by 1 ...

  6. Menaechmus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menaechmus

    Menaechmus (Greek: Μέναιχμος, c. 380 – c. 320 BC) was an ancient Greek mathematician, geometer and philosopher [1] born in Alopeconnesus or Prokonnesos in the Thracian Chersonese, who was known for his friendship with the renowned philosopher Plato and for his apparent discovery of conic sections and his solution to the then-long-standing problem of doubling the cube using the ...

  7. Cone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cone

    It is an affine image of the right-circular unit cone with equation + = . From the fact, that the affine image of a conic section is a conic section of the same type (ellipse, parabola,...), one gets: Any plane section of an elliptic cone is a conic section. Obviously, any right circular cone contains circles.

  8. Focal conics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focal_conics

    Equations. If one describes the ellipse in the x-y-plane in the common way by the equation + =, then the corresponding focal hyperbola in the x-z-plane has equation

  9. Conical surface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conical_surface

    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.