Worm-like chain: Difference between revisions

From formulasearchengine
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
en>Dewritech
clean up, typo(s) fixed: accesible → accessible using AWB
Line 1: Line 1:
:''For the hat, see [[Bicorne]].''
Andrew Berryhill is what his wife loves to call him and he totally digs that title. Her family members life in Ohio but her spouse desires them to move. Distributing manufacturing has been his occupation for some time. What I adore doing is soccer but I don't have the time lately.<br><br>Look into my web blog authentic psychic readings; [http://www.octionx.sinfauganda.co.ug/node/22469 please click the next webpage],
:''For the mythical beast, see [[Bicorn (legendary creature)]].''
 
[[Image:Bicorn.svg|thumb|right|226px|Bicorn]]
In [[geometry]], the '''bicorn''', also known as a '''cocked hat curve''' due to its resemblance to a [[bicorne]], is a [[Rational curve|rational]] [[quartic curve]] defined by the equation
:<math>y^2(a^2-x^2)=(x^2+2ay-a^2)^2.</math>
It has two [[cusp (singularity)|cusp]]s and is symmetric about the y-axis.
 
==History==
In 1864, [[James Joseph Sylvester]] studied the curve
:<math>y^4-xy^3-8xy^2+36x^2y+16x^2-27x^3=0</math>
in connection with the classification of [[quintic equation]]s; he named the curve a bicorn because it has two cusps. This curve was further studied by [[Arthur Cayley]] in 1867.
 
==Properties==
The bicorn is a [[algebraic curve|plane algebraic curve]] of degree four and [[geometric genus|genus]] zero. It has two cusp singularities in the real plane, and a double point in the [[complex projective plane]] at x=0, z=0 . If we move x=0 and z=0 to the origin substituting and perform an imaginary rotation on x bu substituting ix/z for x and 1/z for y in the bicorn curve, we obtain
:<math>(x^2-2az+a^2z^2)^2  = x^2+a^2z^2.\,</math>
This curve, a [[limaçon]], has an ordinary double point at the origin, and two nodes in the complex plane, at x = &plusmn; i and z=1.
[[Image:Bicorn-inf.jpg|thumb|A transformed bicorn with ''a'' = 1]].
 
The parametric equations of a bicorn curve are:
 
<math>x = a \sin(\theta)</math> and
<math>y = \frac{\cos^2(\theta) \left(2+\cos(\theta)\right)}{3+\sin^2(\theta)}</math> with <math>-\pi\le\theta\le\pi</math>
 
==See also==
* [[List of curves]]
 
==References==
* {{cite book | author=J. Dennis Lawrence | title=A catalog of special plane curves | publisher=Dover Publications | year=1972 | isbn=0-486-60288-5 | pages=147–149 }}
* [http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Curves/Bicorn.html "Bicorn" at The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive]
* {{MathWorld|title=Bicorn|urlname=Bicorn}}
* [http://www.mathcurve.com/courbes2d/bicorne/bicorne.shtml "Bicorne" at Encyclopédie des Formes Mathématiques Remarquables]
* ''The Collected Mathematical Papers of James Joseph Sylvester. Vol. II'' Cambridge (1908) p. 468 ([http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=umhistmath;cc=umhistmath;idno=aas8085.0002.001;view=toc online])
 
[[Category:Curves]]
[[Category:Algebraic curves]]

Revision as of 20:52, 4 March 2014

Andrew Berryhill is what his wife loves to call him and he totally digs that title. Her family members life in Ohio but her spouse desires them to move. Distributing manufacturing has been his occupation for some time. What I adore doing is soccer but I don't have the time lately.

Look into my web blog authentic psychic readings; please click the next webpage,