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I'm interested in plane curves with curvature inversely proportional to distance from the axis:

$$\kappa(t) = \left(\frac{x'(t) y''(t) - y'(t)x''(t)}{(x'(t)^2 + y'(t)^2)^{3/2}} \right) = \frac{1}{a x(t)}$$

where $a$ is a parameter. Is there an (uncommon) name for such a curve? Is there a solution (even in terms of special functions) for the location along a curve as a function of $t$? (For initial conditions one might take $x'(0) = 0, y(0) = 0$.)

Previous studies of this problem

This curve is interesting for physicists: it is the shape of a toroidal solenoid made of filamentary conductors which are constant tension. The problem was studied in the mid-70s; a report freely available here gives formulas (in terms of Bessel functions and Struve functions) for arc lengths and enclosed area of the curves, but not for the shape itself.

Attempts to solve

I tried using Mathematica to solve in both Cartesian and polar coordinates, but came up empty-handed.

$$k r=\frac{\left(z'(r)^2+1\right)^{3/2}}{z''(r)}$$

DSolve[{k r == (1 + z'[r]^2)^(3/2)/z''[r], z[a] == 0, z'[a] == 0}, z,
  r]

$$ r''(t)=\frac{ \left(-\left(r'(t)^2+r(t)^2\right)^{3/2}+2 r(t) \cos (t) r'(t)^2+r(t)^3 \cos (t)\right)}{\cos(t) r(t)^2}, r'(0)=0, r(0)=a $$

DSolve[{(r^\[Prime]\[Prime])[t] == (
   Sec[t] (Cos[t] r[t]^3 + 
      2 Cos[t] r[t] Derivative[1][r][t]^2 - (r[t]^2 + 
        Derivative[1][r][t]^2)^(3/2)))/r[t]^2, 
  Derivative[1][r][0] == 0, r[0] == a}, r, t]

Similar problems

Curves where $\kappa$ is proportional to $x$ are Euler elasticae. Curves where $\kappa$ is proportional to distance from the origin is studied in https://www.jstor.org/stable/2589616 .

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  • $\begingroup$ Explicit examples of curves which have the property that the curvature is proportional to a power of the distance from the axis or the origin are given in the arXiv paper 1102.1579--they are called Mclaurin catenaries and spirals respectively and have parametric resp. polar representations $(F(t),f(t))$ resp. $r f(\theta)=1$ where $f$ is a function of the form $(\cos(d \theta))^{1/d}$ and $F$ is its primitive. They have several other interesting kinetic and geometric properties which are elucidated in the above article $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 18, 2021 at 17:01
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    $\begingroup$ @bathalf15320, that is an answer, it shouldn’t be just a comment! $\endgroup$
    – user44143
    Commented Feb 18, 2021 at 18:38
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks you. I've been reading over the document and admit to being somewhat confused, as I'm but a physicist. I see that Cooper calls these curves MacLaurin catenaries or sinusoidal catenaries. It seems like the paper could help parameterize the specific curve I'm interested in, but I don't yet understand quite how. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 18, 2021 at 20:00

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