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Ellipse

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In mathematics, an ellipse is a figure resembling a circle that has been stretched in one direction. It is an example of a conic section and can be defined as the locus of all points in a plane that have the same sum of distances from two given fixed points (called foci, plural of focus). In nature, the orbits of planets (around a star) are generally elliptic.

Ellipse, showing foci

If the two foci coincide, then the ellipse becomes a circle; such an ellipse is the roundest possible ellipse; and may arguably no longer be a "true" ellipse. The eccentricity of an ellipse is greater than zero and smaller than one.

The line which passes through the foci is the major axis and also the longest line which passes through the ellipse. The line which passes through the centre (halfway between the foci), at right angles to the major axis, is the minor axis. The semimajor axis is one half the major axis; running from the center, through a focus, and to the edge of the ellipse. Likewise, the semiminor axis is one half the minor axis. The two axes are the elliptic equivalants of the diameter, while the two semiaxes are the elliptic equivalents of the radius.

The size and shape of an ellipse are determined by two constants, conventionally denoted a and b. The constant a equals the length of the semimajor axis; The constant b equals the length of the semiminor axis.

Ellipse, showing major and minor axes

An ellipse centred at the origin of an x-y coordinate system with its major axis along the x-axis is defined by the equation

<math>\frac{x^{2}}{a^{2}} + \frac{y^{2}}{b^{2}} = 1 </math>

The same ellipse is also represented by the parametric equations:

<math>x = a\,\cos t</math>
<math>y = b\,\sin t</math>
<math>0 \leq t < 2\pi</math>
which uses the trigonometric functions sin and cos.

The shape of an ellipse is usually expressed by a number called the eccentricity of the ellipse, conventionally denoted e, which is related to a and b by the formula

<math>b^2 = a^2 (1 - e^2).</math>
The eccentricity is a positive number less than 1, or 0 in the case of a circle. The greater the eccentricity is, the larger the ratio of a to b is, and therefore the more elongated the ellipse is. The distance between the foci is 2ae.

The semi-latus rectum of an ellipse, usually denoted l (a lowercase L), is the distance from a focus of the ellipse to the ellipse itself, measured along a line perpendicular to the major axis. It is related to a and b by the formula al = b2.

Ellipse, showing semi-latus rectum

In polar coordinates, an ellipse with one focus at the origin and the other on the negative x-axis is given by the equation

<math>r (1 + e \cos \theta) = l</math>

An ellipse can also be thought of as a projection of a circle: a circle on a plane at angle φ to the horizontal projected vertically onto a horizontal plane gives an ellipse of eccentricity sin φ, provided φ is not 90°.

The area enclosed by an ellipse is πab, where π is Archimedes' constant. The circumference of an ellipse is 4aE(e), where the function E is the complete elliptic integral of the second kind.

See also

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