Ellipse

For other uses, see Ellipse (disambiguation).

In mathematics, an ellipse (from the Greek for absence) is a curve where the sum of the distances from any point on the curve to two fixed points is constant. The two fixed points are called foci (plural of focus).

Thus an ellipse can be drawn with two pins, a loop of string, and a pencil. The pins are placed at the foci and the pins and pencil are enclosed inside the string. The pencil is placed on the paper inside the string, so the string is taut. The string will form a triangle. If the pencil is moved around so that the string stays taut, the sum of the distances from the pencil to the pins will remain constant, satisfying the definition of an ellipse.

Missing image
Ellipse_Animation_Small.gif
Animation of an ellipse.

The line which passes through the foci is called the major axis. The major axis is along the longest segment that passes through the ellipse. The line which passes through the center (halfway between the foci), at right angles to the major axis, is called the minor axis. A semimajor axis is one half the major axis: the line segment from the center, through a focus, and to the edge of the ellipse. Likewise, the semiminor axis is one half the minor axis.

If the two foci coincide, then the ellipse is a circle. Most properties of ellipses also apply to circles as a special case.

An ellipse is a type of conic section: if a cone is cut with a plane which does not intersect the cone's base, the intersection of the cone and plane is an ellipse. For a short elementary proof of this, see Dandelin spheres.

Contents

Parametrisation

The size and shape of an ellipse are determined by two constants, conventionally denoted a and b. The constant a equals the length of the semimajor axis; the constant b equals the length of the semiminor axis.

Ellipse, showing major and minor axes

An ellipse centered at the origin of an x-y coordinate system with its major axis along the x-axis is defined by the equation

<math>\frac{x^{2}}{a^{2}} + \frac{y^{2}}{b^{2}} = 1 <math>

The derivation of this formula is quite instructive and not overly difficult.

The following diagram shows an ellipse demonstrating the Pythagoras equation a² = b² + c² as a special case of the non-parametric equation above (x=0, y=b).

Missing image
Ellipse_PLS_en.png


The same ellipse is also represented by the parametric equations:

<math>x = a\,\cos t<math>
<math>y = b\,\sin t<math>
<math>0 \leq t < 2\pi<math>

which use the trigonometric functions sine and cosine.

If an ellipse is not centered at the origin of an x-y coordinate system, but again has its major axis along the x-axis, it may be specified by the equation

<math>\frac{(x-h)^{2}}{a^{2}} + \frac{(y-k)^{2}}{b^{2}} = 1 <math>

where (h,k) is the center.

A Gauss-mapped form:

<math>\left(\frac{a^2\cos\phi}{\sqrt{a^2\cos^2\phi+b^2\sin^2\phi}},\frac{b^2\sin\phi}{\sqrt{a^2\cos^2\phi+b^2\sin^2\phi}}\right)<math>

has normal <math>(\cos\phi,\sin\phi)<math>.

Eccentricity

The shape of an ellipse is usually expressed by a number called the eccentricity of the ellipse, conventionally denoted e (not to be confused with the mathematical constant e). The eccentricity is related to a and b by the statement

<math>e = \sqrt{1 - \frac{b^2}{a^2}}<math>

or where <math>c<math> (the linear eccentricity of the ellipse) equals the distance from the center to either focus

<math>e = \frac{c}{a}<math>

The eccentricity is a positive number less than 1, or 0 in the case of a circle. The greater the eccentricity is, the larger the ratio of a to b is, and therefore the more elongated the ellipse is. The ellipse shown in the image below has an eccentricity of approximately 0.8733. The distance between the foci is 2ae.

Semi-latus rectum and polar coordinates

The semi-latus rectum of an ellipse, usually denoted l (lowercase L), is the distance from a focus of the ellipse to the ellipse itself, measured along a line perpendicular to the major axis. It is related to a and b by the formula al = b2.

Ellipse, showing semi-latus rectum

In polar coordinates, an ellipse with one focus at the origin and the other on the negative x-axis is given by the equation

<math>r (1 + e \cos \theta) = l \,<math>

An ellipse can also be thought of as a projection of a circle: a circle on a plane at angle φ to the horizontal projected vertically onto a horizontal plane gives an ellipse of eccentricity sin φ, provided φ is not 90°.

Area

The area enclosed by an ellipse is <math>\pi ab\,\!<math>, where <math>\pi<math> is Archimedes' constant.

Circumference

The circumference of an ellipse is 4aE(e), where the function E is the complete elliptic integral of the second kind.

The exact infinite series is:

<math>c = 2\pi a \left[{1 - \left({1\over 2}\right)^2e^2 - \left({1\cdot 3\over 2\cdot 4}\right)^2{e^4\over 3} - \left({1\cdot 3\cdot 5\over 2\cdot 4\cdot 6}\right)^2{e^6\over5} - \dots}\right]\!\,<math>

A good approximation is Ramanujan's:

<math>c \approx \pi \left[3(a+b) - \sqrt{(3a+b)(a+3b)}\right]\!\,<math>

which can also be written as:

<math>c \approx \pi a \left[ 3 (1+\sqrt{1-e^2}) - \sqrt{(3+ \sqrt{1-e^2})(1+3 \sqrt{1-e^2})} \right] \!\,<math>

More generally, the arc length of a portion of the circumference, as a function of the angle subtended, is given by an incomplete elliptic integral. The inverse function, the angle subtended as a function of the arc length, is given by the elliptic functions.

Reflection property

Assume an elliptic mirror with a light source at one of the foci. Then all rays are reflected to a single point — the second focus. Since no other curve has such a property, it can be used as an alternative definition of an ellipse.

Ellipses in physics

Johannes Kepler discovered that the orbits along which the planets travel around the Sun are ellipses. This is Kepler's first law. Later, Isaac Newton explained this fact as a corollary of his law of universal gravitation.

More generally, in the gravitational two-body problem, if the two bodies are bound to each other (i.e., the total energy is negative), their orbits are similar ellipses with the common barycenter being one of the foci of each ellipse.

The general solution for a harmonic oscillator in two or more dimensions is also an ellipse, but this time with the origin of the force located in the center of the ellipse.

Albert Einstein also used the ellipse to prove his theory of relativity by using an elliptical shaped mass. Einstein's contributions to modern physics may not have been discovered if it were not for ellipses.

See also

da:Ellipse de:Ellipse es:Elipse eo:Elipso fi:Ellipsi fr:Ellipse ia:Ellipse io:Elipsalo ja:楕円 nl:Ellips (wiskunde) pl:Elipsa (matematyka) ru:Эллипс uk:Еліпс sl:Elipsa sv:Ellips zh:椭圆

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