Help with determining Angle of Rotation for a Conic, please.

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To determine the angle of rotation for the conic equation 153x^2 - 192xy + 97y^2 - 30x - 40y - 200 = 0, the formula cot 2(theta) = (A - C) / B is used, resulting in cot 2(theta) = -56/192. This leads to an initial calculation of 2*theta = arctan(192/-56), yielding -73.7398 degrees, which translates to theta = -37 degrees. Since the desired angle must be between 0 and 90 degrees, the equivalent positive angle can be found by adding 90 degrees, resulting in a counter-clockwise rotation of 53 degrees for the other axis of the ellipse. The discussion highlights the importance of adjusting negative angles to fit the specified range for conic rotation.
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I am looking for the angle needed to rotate the conic to eliminate the xy-term
but the angle I find is negative and I need the counter-clockwise angle of rotation to satisfy 0 < theta < 90 degrees. Where am I going wrong? Or what else do I need to know? Thank you for your help.


I have this equation of a conic and I am supposed to find only the angle of rotation with this formula:

cot 2(theta) = A - C / B

The equation I am using is this:

153x^2 - 192 xy + 97y^2 - 30x -40y - 200 = 0​

I then solve for theta plugging these A = 153 , B = -192 , C = 97 into
cot 2(theta) = A - C / B

I get this equation: cot 2(theta) = -56/192

Let theta = 2*theta

Then :
cot theta = -56/192

I take the inverse tangent to find 2*theta and then solve for theta like this:
arctan ( 192/-56) = -73.7398 degrees

Remember I let theta = 2*theta

-73.7398 = 2*theta

theta = -37 degrees.

Is there a way for -37 degrees to satisfy the original question?
 
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If one axis of the ellipse is at -37 degrees then the other axis, at right angles to that, is 90- 37= 53 degrees.
 
i get it, thank you very much.
 
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