1 / 17

Frégier Families of Conics

Frégier Families of Conics. Michael Woltermann Washington and Jefferson College Washington, PA 15301 JMM Meeting San Diego, CA, Jan ., 2013. Frégier’s Theorem .

taylor
Download Presentation

Frégier Families of Conics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Frégier Families of Conics Michael Woltermann Washington and Jefferson College Washington, PA 15301 JMM Meeting San Diego, CA, Jan., 2013

  2. Frégier’s Theorem If from a point P on a conic any two perpendicular lines are drawn cutting the conic in points Q and R, then line QR meets the normal at P at a fixed point P’.

  3. Frégier’sTheorem • Modern proofs involve things like • Involutivehomographies • Good paramatrizations • Polar correspondence • An analytic proof (for an ellipse) by John Casey (1893) finds equation of lines in terms of eccentric angles. • An analytic proof for any conic section by W.J.Johnston (1893) is fairly straightforward.

  4. A lemma An equation for a pair of perpendicular lines through the origin is . Let the lines be and where □

  5. Johnston’s Proof • Let P be a point on conic c. • With P as origin and the tangent line as the x-axis and the normal line as the y-axis, an equation of c is (I): • An equation for perpendiculars PQ and PR is (II): . • (I)-(II) is:

  6. Johnston’s Proof • Or • is the tangent line at P. • is the equation of QR. • Its y-intercept (on the normal line at P) is found by setting giving a y-intercept of independent of (and , the slope of PQ). □

  7. How to Find P’ • Let P0 be the point of intersection (other than P) of the conic c with the line through P parallel to the directrix. • P’ is the intersection of the normal line at P with the line through P0 and the center of c. (The center of a parabola is the ideal point on its axis.)

  8. For example

  9. What is the locus of P’? • As P moves on a conic c, P’ moves along a conic F(c). • If c is • , then F(c) is • then

  10. The locus of P’ • In other words, F(c) is dilated (or translated) image of c. • But not pointwise. Some Exceptions • What happens if c is a circle? • What happens if c is a rectangular (equilateral) hyperbola? ().

  11. Some Properties of F(c) • c and F(c) have the same eccentricity. • c and F(c) have the same center. • If c is a parabola, the lengths of the latus rectum of both c and F(c) are the same. • If c is a hyperbola c and F(c) have the same asymptotes. • If c and d are conjugate hyperbolas, so are F(c) and F(d).

  12. Iterating F • Fn(c)=F(Fn-1(c)) for n≥1. • If c is • , then F(c) is • then • What is F-1(c)?

  13. Finding P from P’ • Let c’ be a conic, P’ be on c’, O the center of c’. • Reflect P’ about the major axis of c’ to point P’’. • Construct normal to c’ at P’ • Reflect the normal about the line through P’ parallel to the directrix to line m. • P is the intersection of m and line OP’’.

  14. Why? • An analytic proof is easy. • Show that if P’ is the Frégier point of P relative to a conic c, then the construction above takes P’ back to P. • Consider central conics and parabolas separately.

  15. FrégierFamilies of Conics • If c is • , then F(c) is • then

  16. References • Akopyan, A.V. and Zaslavsky, A.A.; Geometry of Conics; AMS, 2007. • Casey, John; A Treatise on the analytical geometry of the point, line, circle, and conic sections; Dublin U. Press, 1893. • Frégier involution by orthogonals from a conic-point; http://www.math.uoc.gr/ • Johnston, W.J.; An Elementary Treatise on Analytical Geometry; Clarendon Press, 1893 • Wells, D.; The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry; Penguin, 1991.

More Related