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Astroid

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Astroid
The hypocycloid construction of the astroid.
Astroid as the common envelope of a family of traced ellipses, where a + b = const.

An astroid is a particular mathematical curve: a hypocycloid with four cusps. Specifically, it is the locus of a point on a circle as it rolls inside a fixed circle with four times the radius.[1] By double generation, it is also the locus of a point on a circle as it rolls inside a fixed circle with 4/3 times the radius. It can also be defined as the envelope of a line segment with an end point on each of the axes. It is therefore the envelope of the moving bar in the Trammel of Archimedes.

Its modern name comes from the Greek word for "star". It was proposed, originally in the form of "Astrois", by Joseph Johann von Littrow in 1838.[2][3] The curve had a variety of names, including tetracuspid (still used), cubocycloid, and paracycle. It is nearly identical in form to the evolute of an ellipse.

Equations

If the radius of the fixed circle is a then the equation is given by[4]

This implies that an astroid is also a superellipse.

Parametric equations are

The pedal equation with respect to the origin is

the Whewell equation is

and the Cesàro equation is

The polar equation is[5]

The astroid is a real locus of a plane algebraic curve of genus zero. It has the equation

The astroid is therefore a real algebraic curve of degree six.

Metric properties

Area enclosed[6]
Length of curve
Volume of the surface of revolution of the enclose area about the x-axis.
Area of surface of revolution about the x-axis

Properties

The astroid has four cusp singularities in the real plane, the points on the star. It has two more complex cusp singularities at infinity, and four complex double points, for a total of ten singularities.

The dual curve to the astroid is the cruciform curve with equation The evolute of an astroid is an astroid twice as large.

See also

References

  1. ^ Yates
  2. ^ J. J. v. Littrow (1838). "§99. Die Astrois". Kurze Anleitung zur gesammten Mathematik. Wien. p. 299.
  3. ^ Loria, Gino (1902). Spezielle algebraische und transscendente ebene kurven. Theorie und Geschichte. Leipzig. p. 224.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Yates, for section
  5. ^ Mathworld
  6. ^ Yates, for section
  • J. Dennis Lawrence (1972). A catalog of special plane curves. Dover Publications. pp. 4–5, 34–35, 173–174. ISBN 0-486-60288-5.
  • Wells D (1991). The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry. New York: Penguin Books. pp. 10–11. ISBN 0-14-011813-6.
  • R.C. Yates (1952). "Astroid". A Handbook on Curves and Their Properties. Ann Arbor, MI: J. W. Edwards. pp. 1 ff.