Limaçon trisectrix

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The limaçon trisectrix specified as the polar equation r=a(1+2cosθ), where a > 0. When a < 0, the resulting curve is the reflection of this curve with respect to the line θ=π/2. As a function, r has a period of . The inner and outer loops of the curve intersect at the pole.

In geometry, a limaçon trisectrix is the name for the quartic plane curve that is a trisectrix that is specified as a limaçon. The shape of the limaçon trisectrix can be specified by other curves particularly as a rose, conchoid or epitrochoid.[1] The curve is one among a number of plane curve trisectrixes that includes the Conchoid of Nicomedes,[2] the Cycloid of Ceva,[3] Quadratrix of Hippias, Trisectrix of Maclaurin, and Tschirnhausen cubic. The limaçon trisectrix a special case of a sectrix of Maclaurin.

Specification and loop structure

The limaçon trisectrix specified as a polar equation is

r=a(1+2cosθ).[4]

The constant a may be positive or negative. The two curves with constants a and a are reflections of each other across the line θ=π/2. The period of r=a(1+2cosθ) is 2π given the period of the sinusoid cosθ. The limaçon trisectrix is composed of two loops.

  • The outer loop is defined when 1+2cosθ0 on the polar angle interval 2π/3θ2π/3, and is symmetric about the polar axis. The point furthest from the pole on the outer loop has the coordinates (3a,0).
  • The inner loop is defined when 1+2cosθ0 on the polar angle interval 2π/3θ4π/3, and is symmetric about the polar axis. The point furthest from the pole on the inner loop has the coordinates (a,0), and on the polar axis, is one-third of the distance from the pole compared to the furthest point of the outer loop.
  • The outer and inner loops intersect at the pole.

The curve can be specified in Cartesian coordinates as

a2(x2+y2)=(x2+y22ax)2,

and parametric equations

x=(a+2acosθ)cosθ=a(1+cosθ+cos(2θ)),
y=(a+2acosθ)sinθ=a(sinθ+sin(2θ)).

Relationship with rose curves

In polar coordinates, the shape of r=a(1+2cosθ) is the same as that of the rose r=2acos(θ/3). Corresponding points of the rose are a distance |a| to the left of the limaçon's points when a>0, and |a| to the right when a<0. As a rose, the curve has the structure of a single petal with two loops that is inscribed in the circle r=2a and is symmetric about the polar axis. The inverse of this rose is a trisectrix since the inverse has the same shape as the trisectrix of Maclaurin.

Relationship with the sectrix of Maclaurin

See the article Sectrix of Maclaurin on the limaçon as an instance of the sectrix.

Trisection properties

The outer and inner loops of the limaçon trisectrix have angle trisection properties. Theoretically, an angle may be trisected using a method with either property, though practical considerations may limit use.

Outer loop trisectrix property

Angle trisection property of the (green) outer loop of the limaçon trisectrix r=1+2cosθ. The (blue) generating circle r=2cosθ is required to prove the trisection of PMB. The (red) construction results in two angles, QMP and QPM, that have one-third the measure of PMB; and one angle, PAB, that has two-thirds the measure of PMB.

The construction of the outer loop of r=1+2cosθ reveals its angle trisection properties.[5] The outer loop exists on the interval 2π/3θ2π/3. Here, we examine the trisectrix property of the portion of the outer loop above the polar axis, i.e., defined on the interval 0θ2π/3.

  • First, note that polar equation r=2cosθ is a circle with radius 1, center M(1,0) on the polar axis, and has a diameter that is tangent to the line θ=π/2 at the pole A. Denote the diameter containing the pole as AB, where B is at (2,0).
  • Second, consider any chord AQ of the circle with the polar angle θ=α. Since AQB is a right triangle, AQ=2cosα. The corresponding point P on the outer loop has coordinates (AQ+1,α), where 0<απ.

Given this construction, it is shown that QMP and two other angles trisect PMB as follows:

  • mQMB=2α, as it is the central angle for QB^ on the circle r=2cosθ.
  • The base angles of isosceles triangle AMQ measure α – specifically, mQAB=mAQM=α.
  • The apex angle of isosceles triangle PQM is supplementary with AQM, and so, mPQM=πα. Consequently the base angles, QMP and QPM measure α/2.
  • mPMB=mQMBmQMP=2αα/2=3α/2. Thus PMB is trisected, since mQMP/mPMB=1/3.
  • Note that also mQPM/mQMB=1/3, and mPAB/mQMB=2/3.

The upper half of the outer loop can trisect any central angle of r=2cosθ because 0<3α/2<π implies 0<α<2π/3 which is in the domain of the outer loop.

Inner loop trisectrix property

Angle trisection property of the (green) inner loop of the limaçon trisectrix r=1+2cosθ. Given a point C on the (blue) unit circle r=1 centered at the pole A with M at (1,0), where CM (in red) intersects the inner loop at P, PAM trisects CAM. The (black) normal line to CM is θ=ϕ, so C is at (1,2ϕ). The inner loop is re-defined on the interval 0θπ/3 as r=(1+2cos(θ+π)) because its native range is greater than π where its radial coordinates are non-positive.

The inner loop of the limaçon trisectrix has the desirable property that the trisection of an angle is internal to the angle being trisected.[6] Here, we examine the inner loop of r=1+2cosθ that lies above the polar axis, which is defined on the polar angle interval πθ4π/3. The trisection property is that given a central angle that includes a point C lying on the unit circle with center at the pole, r=1, has a measure three times the measure of the polar angle of the point P at the intersection of chord CM and the inner loop, where M is at (1,0). In Cartesian coordinates the equation of CM is y=k(x1), where k<0, which is the polar equation

r=ksinθkcosθ=kcos(θϕ)=ksec(θϕ), where tanϕ=1k and ϕ=atan2(1,k).

(Note: atan2(y,x) gives the polar angle of the Cartesian coordinate point (x,y).) Since the normal line to CM is θ=ϕ, it bisects the apex of isosceles triangle CAM, so mCAM=2ϕ and the polar coordinates of C is (1,2ϕ). With respect to the limaçon, the range of polar angles πθ4π/3 that defines the inner loop is problematic because the range of polar angles subject to trisection falls in the range 0θπ. Furthermore, on its native domain, the radial coordinates of the inner loop are non-positive. The inner loop then is equivalently re-defined within the polar angle range of interest and with non-negative radial coordinates as r=(1+2cos(θ+π))=(12cosθ), where cos(θ+π)=cosθ. Thus, the polar coordinate α of P is determined by

(12cosα)=ksinαkcosα
(sinαkcosα)2cosαsinα+2kcos2α=k
cos(αϕ)sin(2α)+2k(1+cos(2α)2)=k
cos(αϕ)sin(2α)+kcos(2α)=0
cos(αϕ)=cos(2αϕ).

The last equation has two solutions, the first being: αϕ=2αϕ, which results in α=0, the polar axis, a line that intersects both curves but not at C on the unit circle. The second solution is based on the identity cos(x)=cos(x) which is expressed as

αϕ=ϕ2α, which implies 2ϕ=3α,

and shows that mCAM=3(mPAM) demonstrating the larger angle has been trisected. The upper half of the inner loop can trisect any central angle of r=1 because 0<3α<π implies 0<α<π/3 which is in the domain of the re-defined loop.

Line segment trisection property

The limaçon trisectrix r=a(1+2cosθ) trisects the line segment on the polar axis that serves as its axis of symmetry. Since the outer loop extends to the point (3a,0) and the inner loop to the point (a,0), the limaçon trisects the segment with endpoints at the pole (where the two loops intersect) and the point (3a,0), where the total length of 3a is three times the length running from the pole to the other end of the inner loop along the segment.

Relationship with the trisectrix hyperbola

Given the limaçon trisectrix r=1+2cosθ, the inverse r1 is the polar equation of a hyperbola with eccentricity equal to 2, a curve that is a trisectrix. (See Hyperbola - angle trisection.)

References

  1. Xah Lee. "Trisectrix". Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  2. Oliver Knill. "Chonchoid of Nicomedes". Harvard College Research Program project 2008. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  3. Weisstein, Eric W. "Cycloid of Ceva". MathWorld.
  4. Xah Lee. "Trisectrix". Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  5. Yates, Robert C. (1942). The Trisection Problem (PDF) (The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics ed.). Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Franklin Press. pp. 23–25.
  6. "Trisectrix" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 292.

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