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Conic Sections Study Guide. By David Chester. Types of Conic Sections. Circle . Ellipse. Parabola. Hyperbola. Solving Conics. Graphing a conic section requires recognizing the type of conic you are given
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Conic Sections Study Guide By David Chester
Types of Conic Sections Circle Ellipse Parabola Hyperbola
Solving Conics • Graphing a conic section requires recognizing the type of conic you are given • To identify the correct form look at key traits of the conic that distinguish it from others • Once you know what type of conic it is you can start graphing by applying the points and properties starting from the center/vertex
Directory • Formulas • Circle • Ellipse • Parabola • Hyperbola • Graphing/Plotting • Circle • Ellipse • Horizontal • Vertical • Parabola • Hyperbola • Horizontal • Vertical • Differences/Identifying • Circle • Ellipse • Parabola • Hyperbola
Formulas General Equation for conics: Ax2 + Bxy + Cy2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0 • Circle: (x-h)2 + (y-k)2 = r2 If Center is (0,0): x2 + y2 = r2 Back to Directory
Ellipse Formula Axis is horizontal: Axis is Vertical: a2 - b2 = c2 Back to Directory
Parabola Formula • Opens left or right: Opens up or Down: (y-k)2=4p(x-h) (x-h)2=4p(y-k) Back to Directory
Hyperbola Formula • x2 term is positive : y2 is positive: a2 + b2 = c2 Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Circles • Circle: • To Graph a Circle: • Write equation in standard form. • Place a point for the center (h, k) • Move “r” units right, left, up and down from center. • Connect points that are “r” units away from center with smooth curve. r p Definition of a Circle A circle is the set of all points in a plane that are equidistant from a fixed point, called the center of the circle. The distance r between the center and any point P on the circle is called the radius. Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Ellipses Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Ellipses Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Parabolas Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Hyperbolas Back to Directory
Graphing and Plotting Hyperbolas Back to Directory
Differences/Identifying Generally: Using the General Second Degree Equation Ax2 + Bxy + Cy2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0 and the properties you can determine the type of conic, more specific ways to identify are on the next few slides. Back to Directory
Circle Traits • Circles x, y, and r are terms will always be squared or be squares, this does not guarantee perfect squares • Circles are generally simple formulas as they do not have an a, b, c, or p Examples: Back to Directory
Ellipse Traits • A key point of an ellipse is that you add to equal 1 • In an ellipse a and b term switch with horizontal versus vertical • a>b • Horizontal: a on the left side • Vertical: a on right side • a2 - b2 = c2 Examples: Back to Directory
Parabola Traits • Parabola is unique because it has a p in its equation • Only one term is squared • The x and y switch place with left & right versus up & down • Up & Down: x on the left • Left & Right: x on the right Examples: Back to Directory
Hyperbola Traits • A key point for a hyperbola is that you subtract in order to equal 1 • In a hyperbola the x and y terms switch in a horizontal versus a vertical • Horizontal: x on the left side • Vertical: x on right side • a2 + b2 = c2 Examples: Back to Directory
Bibliography • http://math2.org/math/algebra/conics.htm • http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/formulas/faq.analygeom_2.html#twoconicsections • http://www.clausentech.com/lchs/dclausen/algebra2/formulas/Ch9/Ch9_Conic_Sections_etc_Formulas.doc • Major Credit to: Kevin Hopp and Sue Atkinson (Slides 9-12 directly from them)