Questions tagged [conic-sections]

The tag has no usage guidance.

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
0 votes
2 answers
161 views

Radical line of two ellipses

The equation of an ellipse with focal points $(a_1,b_1)$ and $(a_2,b_2)$ which passes through the point $(a_3,b_3)$ is given by the equation $$\begin{gathered} \sqrt{ (x-a_1)^2+(y-b_1)^2 } + \sqrt{ (x-...
Benjamin L. Warren's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
121 views

On the elliptic curve $X^3+6d^2X-7d^3 = Y^2$ and the ellipse $p^2+3q^2-d = 0$?

From the ellipse $p^2+3q^2 - d = 0$ we can find a solution to the equation, $$a^3+b^3+c^3 = (c+m)^3$$ if we solve the elliptic curve, $$E:=X^3+6d^2X-7d^3 = Y^2$$ More details can be found in this MSE ...
Tito Piezas III's user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
188 views

Locus of points for which the sum of the angles subtended there by two different line segments is a constant

Given a line segment AB, the locus of points P such that the angle APB has a constant value is a 'biconvex lens' formed by 2 circular arcs that passes through the points A and B. Special case: if APB ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
0 votes
0 answers
22 views

Smallest Semi-ellipses that contain a convex n-gon

Definition: Let us define a semi-ellipse as either of the two halves into which an elliptical region is cut by any line that passes through its center. Obviously, all semi-ellipses that come from any ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
0 votes
0 answers
13 views

Relation between the "s" parameter of Ungar's theory of hyperbolic geometry and the eccentricty in the 2D case

In Ungar's theory of hyperbolic geometry for the Minkowski model, there is a parameter $s>0$ which controls the curvature of the hyperbolic segments: Ungar's theory is not very well-known. An ...
Stéphane Laurent's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
113 views

Reconstructing an ellipse from an arc, synthetically

Given only an arc of a circle, we can easily reconstruct it fully without any use of analytic geometry - indeed using only compass and straightedge. Note that by "given only an arc", we mean ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
0 votes
0 answers
71 views

The closest ellipse and circle to a given triangle - 2

We add a little more to The closest ellipse to a given triangle. The above linked discussion used the Hausdorff distance to quantify how close two planar convex regions are. In an earlier post - ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
-2 votes
1 answer
233 views

Are there any non-elementary functions that are computable?

Does a function $\mathit{f}:\mathbb{R}→\mathbb{R}$ being non-elementary (not expressible as a combination of finitely many elementary operations), imply that it is not computable? The particular case ...
mishmish's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
175 views

The closest ellipse to a given triangle

Definition: The Hausdorff distance between two point sets is the greatest of all the distances from a point in one set to the closest point in the other set. Question: Given a general triangle T, to ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
3 votes
1 answer
128 views

Is the smallest root of this quartic always the closest point on the Hyperbola? [closed]

Let $a>b>0$. Suppose we want to minimize $$ f(x)=(x-a)^2+(1/x-b)^2, $$ over $x>0$. Equating $f'(x)=0$ leads to the quartic equation $$ g(x)=x^4-ax^3+bx-1=0. \tag{1} $$ Question: Is the ...
Asaf Shachar's user avatar
  • 6,621
4 votes
1 answer
250 views

On maximum perimeter triangles inscribed in convex regions with one vertex fixed

Ref: Convex curves with many inscribed triangles maximizing perimeter Given a planar convex region C. Let P be a variable point on its boundary. Observations: When C is an ellipse, the variation in ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
2 votes
0 answers
106 views

Ellipse of least perimeter that contains a given triangle

This post is related to Smallest 3-ellipses that contain triangles and tries to clarify a basic issue. Question: Given a general triangle T, How does one find and characterize the ellipse of least ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
2 votes
0 answers
70 views

Tiling with triangles with same Steiner ellipses

We continue from Tiling with triangles of same circumradius and inradius . Definitions: Given any triangle, its Steiner circumellipse is the unique circumellipse (ellipse that touches the triangle at ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
3 votes
1 answer
264 views

Inscribed $n$-gons of maximum perimeter for an ellipse

It appears that the max area inscribed $n$-gon for an ellipse is not unique - if one inscribes a regular $n$-gon in a circle with radius a (there are infinitely many orientations for this inscribed ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
2 votes
1 answer
239 views

Smallest 3-ellipses that contain triangles

Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-ellipse Question: How does one find and characterize the smallest 3-ellipses (n-ellipses with n =3) that contain a given triangle? 'Smallest' can mean 'least ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
5 votes
1 answer
285 views

A question on motivic zeta-function

It's well-known that over $\mathbb F_q$ every smooth projective conic $C$ is isomorphic to a projective line. So the formula for the motivic zeta-function $Z_{mot}(C)$ is evident since $S^n\mathbb P^1 ...
John S.'s user avatar
  • 111
4 votes
0 answers
127 views

Largest disk contained in an ellipsoid

It is known that any ellipsoid with principal semi-axes $a$, $b$, $c$ has circular planar sections (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_section). Is the largest circular disk contained within any ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,493
4 votes
2 answers
208 views

Six conelliptic points

Can you prove the following proposition: Proposition. Given an arbitrary triangle $\triangle ABC$. Let $D,E,F$ be the points on the sides $AB$,$BC$ and $AC$ respectively , such that $\frac{AB}{DA}=\...
Pedja's user avatar
  • 2,683
1 vote
1 answer
79 views

Equal products of triangle areas

Can you prove the following claim: Claim. Given hexagon circumscribed about an ellipse. Let $A_1,A_2,A_3,A_4,A_5,A_6$ be the vertices of the hexagon and let $B$ be the intersection point of its ...
Pedja's user avatar
  • 2,683
5 votes
1 answer
418 views

Golden ratio as a property of conic section (is it known?)

I am looking for a proof of a discovery as follows: Let $ABC$ be arbitrary triangle and $(\Omega)$ be an arbitrary circumconic of $ABC$ let $A'B'C'$ is its tangential triangle of $ABC$ respect to $(\...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
343 views

Thirteen-point conic and four-point line, are they new?

We know that Five points determine a conic and Two Points Determine a Line. Here I found a simple construct of a conic through $7$ points (in PS I note that how the conic through thirteen points) and ...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
211 views

Does anyone know of an academic reference for this proof that the tangent to a hyperbola at a point bisects the angle between each focus to the point?

I am writing a report and as part of it I need to prove the property that for a point $P$ on a hyperbola, the tangent to the hyperbola at $P$ bisects the angle $\angle F_1PF_2$ where $F_1$ and $F_2$ ...
Louisa's user avatar
  • 17
10 votes
2 answers
683 views

Geometric construction of the fourth intersection points of two conics

In general, two conics in the plane intersect at most 4 points. Suppose three of those points are given as $A,B,C$. Then let $c_1$ be the conic passing through those three points and $D_1,E_1$. Let $...
Vu Thanh Tung's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
162 views

Reference request on a characterization of ellipses

One up-vote, 35 views, and no comments and no answers have resulted from this reference request that I posted on math.stackexchange.com . This was actually inspired by a probability exercise, and at ...
Michael Hardy's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
873 views

A new theorem (discovered in 2013) equivalent to Brianchon theorem (the old theorem) discovered in XIX century?

In 2013, I found a new problem as follows: Let six points $A_1$, $A_2$, ...$A_6$ lie on a circle $(O_1)$, and the six points $B_1$, $B_2$,...,$B_6$ lie on another circle $(O_2)$. If the quadruples $...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
8 votes
0 answers
238 views

What is a geometric construction corresponding to elliptic curve addition for Poncelet's Porism?

Background At least since Griffiths and Harris [1] we know that the geometric construction "draw the next tangent" appearing in Poncelet's Porism corresponds to addition of a constant in the elliptic ...
Oliver Nash's user avatar
  • 1,404
5 votes
2 answers
129 views

On conics curves and increasing unions of ellipses

It is easy to see that the epigraph of a parabola, i.e. the set $ \\{(x,y)\in \mathbb R^2, y> x^2\\} $ is a countable increasing union of ellipses in the sense that $$ \\{(x,y)\in \mathbb R^2, y&...
Bazin's user avatar
  • 15.2k
7 votes
1 answer
640 views

A problem of four conics

I found a remarkable theorem of four conics as follows some years ago. But it has no proof; I am looking for a proof: Theorem: Take three conics. Suppose that each of them touch a fourth conic at two ...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
337 views

Is it a new method to construction of a conic, how can prove?

There are some methods to construct a conic, example: Based on Pascal theorem, Steiner construction, .....I propose a method to construct a conic as follows: Let $L_1, L_2$ be two parallel lines, let ...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
65 views

Suppressing some but not all terms of a polynomial equation

(I'll ask the question over $\mathbb{R}$, but feel free to change fields if that makes the answer more straightforward or more interesting.) Let $Q$ denote a bivariate quadratic: $$Q(x,y) = Ax^2 + ...
goblin GONE's user avatar
  • 3,693
3 votes
2 answers
364 views

Cone-Torus intersection in 3D

Problem. I have a solid torus and a solid cone in $\mathbb R^3$ and need an efficient algorithm that determines if they intersect or not. The center of the torus is at a given position $\mathbf p \in ...
user3749105's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
946 views

Definition of a Discriminant in Three Variables

I am studying pell conics and the source I am using (Franz Lemmermeyer: Conics - A Poor Man's Elliptic Curves) defines its discriminant as follows: For equations of the form $X^2 + XY + \frac{1-d}{4}...
Jabberwakky's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
134 views

Orthogonal Grassmanians: cases where $\text{OG}( \mathbb{P}^1 , Q) \not \simeq \mathbb{P}^3$

Let $Q = \{ q(x_0, \dots, x_4) = 0 \}$ be a quadric-threefold over a field $k$. Are there cases where the orthogonal Grassmanian $\text{OG}( \mathbb{P}^1 , Q)$ is not a copy of $\mathbb{P}^3$? Here'...
john mangual's user avatar
  • 22.6k
1 vote
0 answers
169 views

Decomposition of conic equation for two intersecting lines [closed]

By using homogeneous coordinates ${\bf x}=[x, y, 1]^T$, a conic section can be expressed by ${\bf x}^T {\bf C} {\bf x} = 0$ with ${\bf C}$ being a 3x3 symmetric matrix. A degenerate form of the conic ...
Johannes B.'s user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
455 views

Conics, string art, and Bezier-like curves

It is well documented that certain string-art patterns generate quadratic Bezier curves: let $x, y_1, y_2$ be three points in $\mathbb{E}^2$, consider the family of line segments joining $x + (1-t) (...
Willie Wong's user avatar
  • 37.6k
7 votes
0 answers
404 views

Can generalization of a generalization Pascal theorem, Pappus theorem to Higher Dimensions? [closed]

Please see a chain of six circles associated with a conic. This is a generalization of Pascal theorem, Pappus theorem. I reformulate as following: Let $1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6$ be six arbitrary points in a ...
Cố Gắng Lên's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
209 views

Is algebraic geometry related to conical intersection in potential energy surface of molecules?

I post this question here because it seems that the equations describing conical intersections in molecular potential energy surface are similar to what algebraic geometry research concerns. ...
user45703's user avatar
  • 157
3 votes
1 answer
759 views

When do two lines and three points determine exactly two conics? Exactly four?

In the real projective plane, I am given three points and two lines. I want to find out how many conic sections there are that are incident to each of the three points and tangent to each of the two ...
Zsbán Ambrus's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
984 views

approaches to Apollonius circle problems

I've been looking for solutions to finding the set of circles tangent to two other circles. one circle can be inverted to a line, but two circles can be mapped to a line and a circle or equivalently ...
john mangual's user avatar
  • 22.6k
2 votes
0 answers
737 views

Algorithm: Computing the intersection of two conics [closed]

I am looking for a detailed description of an algorithm for the classical problem of computing the intersection of two conics curves. The curves are given by two equations of the form: $a x^2 + b y^2 ...
soegaard's user avatar
  • 121
9 votes
1 answer
998 views

A chain of six circles associated with a conic

I found this problems three years ago. But I never have been a proof. Recently I posted in math.stackexchange.com. I am looking for a solution of the following problems: A chain of six circles ...
Oai Thanh Đào's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
98 views

Intersection of a hyper-plane with a hyper-paraboloid of revolution [closed]

I have the equation of a hyper-Paraboloid of revolution: $2cw=x^2+y^2+z^2$ and the equation of a hyperplane: $Ax+ By+ Cz+ Dw+E=0$ These do intersect by my construction. How do I find the surface ...
Olga M's user avatar
  • 11
22 votes
5 answers
2k views

differential equation of conics

Function $y(x)$ on the plane defines a conic (strictly speaking, at most second order algebraic curve) if and only if $\frac{d^3}{dx^3} (y'')^{-2/3}=0$. What is intuition behind this? How may I see ...
Fedor Petrov's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
465 views

Synthetic projective definition of cubic curves

In a synthetic (Pappian) projective plane, one can define a conic in various clever ways not referring to coordinates. For instance, if $f$ is a projectivity from the pencil of lines through a point $...
Mike Shulman's user avatar
  • 65.1k
2 votes
1 answer
232 views

Reference to parabola lemma

I am looking for a previous reference to the following very simple geometric lemma, which I use in my paper [arXiv:1503.03462]: Let $P$ be the parabola $y=x^2$. Let $a,b,c,d$ be four points on $P$ ...
Gabriel Nivasch's user avatar
16 votes
2 answers
2k views

Discovery and Study of Conic Sections in Ancient Greece

Is there anything known about what drew the attention of ancient greek mathematicians to conic sections and, what were the models they used to study conic sections? What I would like to know, is ...
Manfred Weis's user avatar
  • 12.7k
0 votes
1 answer
540 views

the paraboloid model for hyperbolic space [closed]

In Thurston's Three-Dimensional Geometry and Topology, he gives a recipe for a non-standard model for hyperbolic space which he calls the paraboloid model. I'd like to use the model to try out ...
j0equ1nn's user avatar
  • 2,438
1 vote
1 answer
144 views

Empty real conic containing two pairs of conjugate points in the projective plane?

Given two conjugate pairs of points in general position in $\mathbb{CP}^2$, there is a pencil of real conics containing these four points. Is there a real empty conic in this pencil?
guest84's user avatar
  • 31
6 votes
1 answer
667 views

Does an origin-centered ellipse in the plane intersect each $L^p$-circle at most 8 times?

The question is in the title: Let $E$ be an origin-centered ellipse in ${\mathbb R}^2$ and let $S$ be an "$L^p$-circle": $S = \{(x,y) : |x|^p + |y|^p = \text{const}\}$, where $1 \leq p \leq \infty$. ...
Ryan O'Donnell's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
467 views

Reference question: Poncelet theorem

A very famous theorem of Poncelet states that for an elliptic billiard all $n$-periodic trajectories are tangent to some ellipse. As far as I know, Poncelet proved this theorem while sitting in ...