Tschirnhausen Cubic Catacaustic: Difference between revisions
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:<math> y = at(t^2-3) </math> | :<math> y = at(t^2-3) </math> | ||
Its | Its catacaustic (red curve) with radiant point <math>(-8a,p)</math> | ||
is the semicubical parabola with parametric equations | is the semicubical parabola with parametric equations | ||
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:<math> y = a4t^3 </math> | :<math> y = a4t^3 </math> | ||
You can drag the ''point of reflection''. | The catacaustic is the envelope of the rays reflected by the Tschirnhausen cubic. | ||
The ray's source is the ''radiant point''. | |||
You can get a feeling why the red curve is called ''envelope'' of the blue line if you drag the ''point of reflection''. | |||
<jsxgraph width="600" height="600"> | <jsxgraph width="600" height="600"> | ||
(function(){ | (function(){ | ||
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===References=== | ===References=== | ||
* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TschirnhausenCubicCatacaustic.html Weisstein, Eric W. "Tschirnhausen Cubic Catacaustic." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.] | * [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TschirnhausenCubicCatacaustic.html Weisstein, Eric W. "Tschirnhausen Cubic Catacaustic." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.] | ||
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caustic_%28mathematics%29 Wikipedia on Caustics] | |||
===The underlying JavaScript code=== | ===The underlying JavaScript code=== | ||
<source lang="javascript"> | <source lang="javascript"> |
Latest revision as of 14:26, 13 January 2011
The Tschirnhausen cubic (black curve) is defined parametrically as
- [math]\displaystyle{ x = a3(t^2-3) }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ y = at(t^2-3) }[/math]
Its catacaustic (red curve) with radiant point [math]\displaystyle{ (-8a,p) }[/math] is the semicubical parabola with parametric equations
- [math]\displaystyle{ x = a6(t^2-1) }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ y = a4t^3 }[/math]
The catacaustic is the envelope of the rays reflected by the Tschirnhausen cubic. The ray's source is the radiant point.
You can get a feeling why the red curve is called envelope of the blue line if you drag the point of reflection.
References
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Tschirnhausen Cubic Catacaustic." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
- Wikipedia on Caustics
The underlying JavaScript code
var brd = JXG.JSXGraph.initBoard('jxgbox',{boundingbox:[-10,10,10,-10], keepaspectratio:true, axis:true});
brd.suspendUpdate();
var a = brd.create('slider',[[-5,6],[5,6],[-5,1,5]], {name:'a'});
var cubic = brd.create('curve',
[function(t){ return a.Value()*3*(t*t-3);},
function(t){ return a.Value()*t*(t*t-3);},
-5, 5
],
{strokeWidth:1, strokeColor:'black'});
var radpoint = brd.create('point',[function(){ return -a.Value()*8;},0],{name:'radiant point'});
var reflectionpoint = brd.create('glider',[-7,1,cubic],{name:'point of reflection'});
var dir = brd.create('segment',[radpoint,reflectionpoint],{strokeWidth:1});
var infty = brd.create('point',
[
function(){
var a = dir.stdform[1], b = dir.stdform[2],
t = reflectionpoint.position,
u = JXG.Math.Numerics.D(cubic.X)(t),
v = JXG.Math.Numerics.D(cubic.Y)(t),
dirx = a*v*v-2*b*u*v-a*u*u,
diry = b*u*u-2*a*u*v-b*v*v;
return [0, diry, -dirx];
}
],{name:'', visible:false});
var reflection = brd.create('line',
[reflectionpoint,infty],
{strokeWidth:1, straightFirst:false, trace:true});
var cataustic = brd.create('curve',
[function(t){ return a.Value()*6*(t*t-1);},
function(t){ return a.Value()*4*t*t*t;},
-4, 4
],
{strokeWidth:3, strokeColor:'red'});
brd.unsuspendUpdate();