Epicycloid
A planar curve given by the trajectory of a point on a circle rolling on the exterior side of another circle. The parametric equations are:
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where is the radius of the rolling and
that of the fixed circle, and
is the angle between the radius vector of the point of contact of the circles (see Fig. a, Fig. b) and the
-axis.
Figure: e035860a
Figure: e035860b
Depending on the value of the modulus , the resulting epicycloid has different forms. For
it is a cardioid, and if
is an integer, the curve consists of
distinct branches. The cusps
have the polar coordinates
,
,
. The vertices
of the curve have the coordinates
,
. When
is a rational fraction, the branches intersect each other in the interior; when
is irrational there are infinitely many branches and the curve does not return to a point
describing a position obtained previously; for rational
the epicycloid is a closed algebraic curve. The arc length from the point
is:
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and from it is
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The area of a sector bounded by two radius vectors of the curve and its arc is
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The radius of curvature is
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When the point is not situated on the rolling circle, but lies in its exterior (or interior) region, then the curve is called an elongated (respectively, shortened) epicycloid or epitrochoid (see Trochoid). Epicycloids belong to the so-called cycloidal curves (cf. Cycloidal curve).
References
[1] | A.A. Savelov, "Planar curves" , Moscow (1960) (In Russian) |
Comments
Epicycloids (and hypocycloids, cf. Hypocycloid) have many equivalent definitions. See, e.g., [a3], pp. 273-277. Epicycloids and, more generally, trochoids are important for kinematical constructions, cf. [a1].
References
[a1] | H.-R. Müller, "Kinematik" , de Gruyter (1963) |
[a2] | K. Strubecker, "Differential geometry" , I , de Gruyter (1964) |
[a3] | M. Berger, "Geometry" , I , Springer (1977) |
[a4] | M. Berger, B. Gostiaux, "Differential geometry: manifolds, curves, and surfaces" , Springer (1988) (Translated from French) |
Epicycloid. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Epicycloid&oldid=13845