The Hyperbola reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Hyperbola

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This article is not about hyperbole, which see.


Image:hyperbola.png a graph of a hyperbola, where h = k = 0 and a = b = 2
A hyperbola is a type of conic section.

For a simple geometric proof that the two charaterizations above are equivalent to each other, see Dandelin spheres.

A hyperbola comprises two disconnected curves called its arms which separate the foci. At large distances from the foci the hyperbola begins to approximate two lines, known as asymptotes.

A hyperbola has the property that a ray originating at one of the foci is reflected in such a way as to appear to have originated at the other focus.

A special case of the hyperbola is the equilateral or rectangular hyperbola, in which the asymptotes intersect at right angles. The rectangular hyperbola with the co-ordinate axes as its asymptotes is given by the equation xy=c, where c is a constant.

Just as the sine and cosine functions give a parametric equation for the ellipse, so the hyperbolic sine and hyperbolic cosine give a parametric equation for the hyperbola.

A body that has sufficient energy to escape the gravitational field of a massive body moves in a hyperbolic trajectory with the massive body at one of the foci.

Table of contents
1 Equations (Cartesian):
2 Equations (polar):
3 Equations (parametric):
4 See also
5 External links

Equations (Cartesian):

(center (h, k) )

Equations (polar):

Equations (parametric):

See also

Ellipse, parabola, conic section, Dandelin spheres, hyperbole

External links