Parabola
A plane curve obtained as the intersection of a circular cone with a plane not passing through the vertex of the cone and parallel to one of its tangent planes. A parabola is a set of points $ M $
in the plane for each of which the distance to a given point $ F $(
the focus of the parabola) is equal to the distance to a certain given line $ d $(
the directrix). Thus, a parabola is a conic with eccentricity one. The distance $ p $
from the focus of the parabola to the directrix is called the parameter. A parabola is a symmetric curve; the point of intersection of a parabola with its axis of symmetry is called the vertex of the parabola, the axis of symmetry is called the axis of the parabola. A diameter of a parabola is any straight line parallel to its axis, and can be defined as the locus of the midpoints of a set of parallel chords.
Figure: p071150a
A parabola is a non-central second-order curve. Its canonical equation has the form
$$ y ^ {2} = 2px . $$
The equation of the tangent to a parabola at the point $ ( x _ {0} , y _ {0} ) $ is
$$ yy _ {0} = p( x + x _ {0} ) . $$
The equation of a parabola in polar coordinates $ ( \rho , \phi ) $ is
$$ \rho = \frac{p}{1 - \cos \phi } ,\ \textrm{ where } 0 < \phi < 2 \pi . $$
A parabola has an optical property: Light rays emanating from the focus travel, after reflection in the parabola, parallel to the axis.
Comments
References
[a1] | M. Berger, "Geometry" , II , Springer (1987) pp. Chapt. 17 |
[a2] | J. Coolidge, "A history of the conic sections and quadric surfaces" , Dover, reprint (1968) |
[a3] | H.S.M. Coxeter, "Introduction to geometry" , Wiley (1963) |
Parabola. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Parabola&oldid=48102