focal point
(noun)
A point not on a hyperbola, around which the hyperbola curves.
Examples of focal point in the following topics:
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Introduction to Hyperbolas
- The set of all points such that the difference between the distances to two focal points is constant
- Then the difference of distances between $P$ and the two focal points is:
- Thus, the standard form of the equation for a hyperbola with focal points on the $x$ axis is:
- If the focal points are on the $y$-axis, the variables simply change places:
- The ellipse can be defined as all points that have a constant sum of distances to two focal points, and the hyperbola is defined as all points that have constant difference of distances to two focal points.
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Parts of a Hyperbola
- Therefore the focal points are located at $(h+2\sqrt{m},k+2\sqrt{m})$ and $(h-2\sqrt{m},k-2\sqrt{m})$.
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Types of Conic Sections
- A vertex, which is the point at which the curve turns around
- Its intersection with the cone is therefore a set of points equidistant from a common point (the central axis of the cone), which meets the definition of a circle.
- A radius, which the distance from any point on the circle to the center point
- Two focal points—for any point on the ellipse, the sum of the distances to both focal points is a constant
- Two focal points, around which each of the two branches bend
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Parabolas As Conic Sections
- The vertex is therefore also a point on the cone, and the distance between that point and the cone's central axis is the radius of a circle.
- The focal length is the leg of the right triangle that exists along the axis of symmetry, and the focal point is the vertex of the right triangle.
- Using the definition of sine as opposite over hypotenuse, we can find a formula for the focal length "$f$" in terms of the radius and the angle:
- The vertex will be at the point:
- A right triangle is formed from the focal point of the parabola.
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Applications of Hyperbolas
- A hyperbola is the basis for solving trilateration problems, the task of locating a point from the differences in its distances to given points — or, equivalently, the difference in arrival times of synchronized signals between the point and the given points.
- Trilateration is the a method of pinpointing an exact location, using its distances to a given points.
- The can also be characterized as the difference in arrival times of synchronized signals between the desired point and known points.
- One way of defining a hyperbola is as precisely this: the curve of points such that the absolute value of the difference between the distances to two focal points remains constant.
- Orbits which are circular or elliptical are bound orbits, which is to say the object never escapes its closed path around one of the focal points.
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Parts of an Ellipse
- The foci are two points inside the ellipse that characterize its shape and curvature.
- For a horizontal ellipse, the foci have coordinates $(h \pm c,k)$, where the focal length $c$ is given by
- This diagram of a horizontal ellipse shows the ellipse itself in red, the center $C$ at the origin, the focal points at $\left(+f,0\right)$ and $\left(-f,0\right)$, the major axis vertices at $\left(+a,0\right)$ and $\left(-a,0\right)$, the minor axis vertices at $\left(0,+b\right)$ and $\left(0,-b\right)$.
- It also shows how the sum of the distances from any point on the ellipse to the two foci is a constant, and how the eccentricity is determined by relating one of the foci to a line $D$ called the directrix.
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Standard Equations of Hyperbolas
- In this special case, the rectangle joining the four points on the asymptotes directly above and below the vertices is a square, since the lengths of its sides 2a = 2b.
- The two focal points are labeled F1 and F2, and the thin black line joining them is the transverse axis.
- The eccentricity e equals the ratio of the distances from a point P on the hyperbola to one focus and its corresponding directrix line (shown in green).
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Applications of the Parabola
- One well-known example is the parabolic reflector—a mirror or similar reflective device that concentrates light or other forms of electromagnetic radiation to a common focal point.
- Conversely, a parabolic reflector can collimate light from a point source at the focus into a parallel beam.
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Point-Slope Equations
- The point-slope form is ideal if you are given the slope and only one point, or if you are given two points and do not know what the $y$-intercept is.
- Given a slope, $m$, and a point $(x_{1}, y_{1})$, the point-slope equation is:
- Then plug this point into the point-slope equation and solve for $y$ to get:
- Example: Write the equation of a line in point-slope form, given point $(-3,6)$ and point $(1,2)$, and convert to slope-intercept form
- Plug this point and the calculated slope into the point-slope equation to get:
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The Distance Formula and Midpoints of Segments
- The distance and the midpoint formulas give us the tools to find important information about two points.
- The distance can be from two points on a line or from two points on a line segment.
- The distance between points $(x_{1},y_{1})$ and $(x_{2},y_{2})$ is given by the formula:
- In geometry, the midpoint is the middle point of a line segment, or the middle point of two points on a line, and thus is equidistant from both end-points.
- If you have two points, $(x_{1},y_{1})$ and $(x_{2},y_{2})$, the midpoint of the segment connecting the two points can be found with the formula: