View Full Version : Axis of a Parabola
chaoseverlasting
Dec4-06, 06:38 AM
If someone could tell me how to go about it, I'd really appreciate it. Just point me in the right direction please. Kinda stuck.
The vertex of a parabola is (-3,1) and it touches the x axis at the origin. Find the equation of the axis of the parabola.
If someone could tell me how to go about it, I'd really appreciate it. Just point me in the right direction please. Kinda stuck.
The vertex of a parabola is (-3,1) and it touches the x axis at the origin. Find the equation of the axis of the parabola.
Did you mean, the parabola intersects the x axis at the origin? Or am I missing something?
chaoseverlasting
Dec4-06, 06:48 AM
No, the x-axis is the tangent to the parabola at the origin. I dont know what to do with it.
courtrigrad
Dec4-06, 07:36 AM
I dont think that possible.
chaoseverlasting
Dec4-06, 10:27 AM
Couldnt it be a tilted parabola of the type y^2=4ax so that its lower arm touches the x-axis at the origin?
courtrigrad
Dec4-06, 10:33 AM
yes it could. In that case, it would be opening to the right.
chaoseverlasting
Dec4-06, 10:36 AM
So how would you find its axis?
courtrigrad
Dec4-06, 10:48 AM
it would simply be y = 1.
chaoseverlasting
Dec4-06, 10:52 AM
Why would it be y=1?
Since the axis has to go through the parabola's vertex, and must be parallell to the x-axis.
HallsofIvy
Dec4-06, 04:47 PM
Why would the axis of the parabola have to parallel to the x-axis? We are told that the x-axis is tangent to the parabola at (0,0). No line parallel to the axis of a parabola is ever tangent to it.
THe x-axis is tangent to the parabola at the origin.
The symmetry axis of the parabola is parallell to the x-axis, because the the tangent to the vertex is parallell to the y-axis.
The symmetry axis of a parabola is perpendicular to the tangent at the vertex.
chaoseverlasting
Dec5-06, 04:11 AM
It doesnt say the tangent at the vertex is paralell to the y-axis. You dont know the equation so you cannot assume that. the parabola could be tiled so that the axis of the parabola makes some angle with the x-axis and one of the arms just touches the x-axis at the origin.
HallsofIvy
Dec5-06, 06:17 AM
THe x-axis is tangent to the parabola at the origin.
Yes, that is given.
The symmetry axis of the parabola is parallell to the x-axis, because the the tangent to the vertex is parallell to the y-axis.
Where was that said?
The symmetry axis of a parabola is perpendicular to the tangent at the vertex.
chaoseverlasting
Dec5-06, 09:35 AM
Where do you begin on something like this?
chaoseverlasting
Dec5-06, 11:38 AM
Any ideas on how to go about this?
If someone could tell me how to go about it, I'd really appreciate it. Just point me in the right direction please. Kinda stuck.
The vertex of a parabola is (-3,1) and it touches the x axis at the origin. Find the equation of the axis of the parabola.
Well, if it is a parabola, the equation is of the form y = f(x) = ax^2+bx+c
Now, f(-3)=1 and
f(0)=0
Finally, f'(0)=0
Also, since f(x)= ax^2+bx+c and f(0)=0 c must also equal zero.
I'm not sure how any of this will help you though.
EDIT: I think I'm wrong again (as usual). I guess the equation of a parabola does not have to be of the form ax^2+bx+c=f(x)
chaoseverlasting
Dec6-06, 04:07 AM
Could it be that the question is incomplete?
I think the equation should be y=a(x-h)^2+k
Since (-3,1) is the vertex h=-3 and k=1
we get y=a(x+3)^2+1
If x=0 and y=0
9a+1=0 a=-1/9 y=1-((x+3)^2)/9
chaoseverlasting
Dec7-06, 04:34 AM
Yes, that would be true if the axis were parallel to the x-axis, but it isnt so. The parabola is tilted.
accidental double post.:o
please remove. :)
You can construct a geometric solution by using the property of a parabola that the gradient (tan of angle) of the "vertex to point" chord is equal to one half of the gradient of the tangent at the point.
See if you can follow through on this and after a bit of basic geometry you should be able to get an equation (based on the tan of sum/difference formula) of something like :
\frac{\tan(\theta)}{1 + 2 \tan^2(\theta)} = \frac{1}{3}
Actually that is the solution for the angle whose tan is one half that of the required angle of rotation, but it's going to be pretty easy if you can get to this point.
Note that the above is a quadratic so there are actually two solutions. One solution has smaller rotation (measured from vertical) and a longer focal length whereas the second solution has greater rotation (axis is closer to the x-axis) and a shorter focal length.
chaoseverlasting
Dec9-06, 06:16 AM
Sorry, you lost me. The slope of the chord from a point to the vertex is equal to half the slope of the tangent at that point?
Sorry, you lost me. The slope of the chord from a point to the vertex is equal to half the slope of the tangent at that point?
Yeah that's correct for a parabola of the usual form (x^2=4ay). Say you denote the vertex point "O" and some general point on the parabola as point "P", then the gradient of the straight line joining "O" and "P" is one half of the gradient of the tangent at "P". This a well known property of a parabola that's very easily proven.
Take a look at the attachment. This diagram shows the parabola after its been rotated back to a vertical axis. Your goal is to determine the angle PRQ though which we have rotated it to make it vertical. This of course will be the original angle of the axis (measured from vertical) of the original given parabola.
In this diagram we know the following facts.
1. tan(PRQ) = 2 tan(POR)
2. PS = 3
3. OS = 1
4. OSP is a right angle.
I used the above information and some geometry to solve for tan(POR) and hence to find angle PRQ.
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