conics again (1 Viewer)

Joined
Sep 8, 2007
Messages
119
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
conics is doing my head in.

Show that the locus of the foot of the perpendicular drawn from the origin to the tangent to the curve xy=c^2 at the point P (ct, c/t) is given by (x^2+y^2)^2 = 4c^2xy
 

Affinity

Active Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2003
Messages
2,062
Location
Oslo
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2003
method 1:
find the equation of a tangent and the perpendicular, solve, etc. (this is the usual way)

dy/dx = dy/dy / dx/dt = -1/t^2

so the tangent is
(y - c/t) = -(x - ct)/t^2 -------> x + yt^2 =2ct
and the perpendicular has gradient t^2 through the origin, so its formula is
y = t^2 x

solving gives
x = 2ct/(1+t^4)
y = 2ct/(t^2 + 1/t^2)

so

y = 2c[sqrt(y/x)]/[ x/y + y/x]
sqrt(xy) = 2c / [ (x^2 + y^2)/ xy]
x^2 + y^2 = 2c* sqrt(xy)

and squaring gives what you are after.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top