Conical surface

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In geometry, a conical surface is an unbounded surface in three-dimensional space formed from the union of infinite lines that pass through a fixed point and a space curve.

Definitions

A (general) conical surface is the unbounded surface formed by the union of all the straight lines that pass through a fixed point — the apex or vertex — and any point of some fixed space curve — the directrix — that does not contain the apex. Each of those lines is called a generatrix of the surface. The directrix is often taken as a plane curve, in a plane not containing the apex, but this is not a requirement.

In general, a conical surface consists of two congruent unbounded halves joined by the apex. Each half is called a nappe, and is the union of all the rays that start at the apex and pass through a point of some fixed space curve. Sometimes the term "conical surface" is used to mean just one nappe.

Special cases

If the directrix is a circle C {\displaystyle C} , and the apex is located on the circle's axis (the line that contains the center of C {\displaystyle C} and is perpendicular to its plane), one obtains the right circular conical surface or double cone. More generally, when the directrix C {\displaystyle C} is an ellipse, or any conic section, and the apex is an arbitrary point not on the plane of C {\displaystyle C} , one obtains an elliptic cone.

Equations

A conical surface S {\displaystyle S} can be described parametrically as

S ( t , u ) = v + u q ( t ) {\displaystyle S(t,u)=v+uq(t)} ,

where v {\displaystyle v} is the apex and q {\displaystyle q} is the directrix.

Related surface

Conical surfaces are ruled surfaces, surfaces that have a straight line through each of their points. Patches of conical surfaces that avoid the apex are special cases of developable surfaces, surfaces that can be unfolded to a flat plane without stretching. When the directrix has the property that the angle it subtends from the apex is exactly 2 π {\displaystyle 2\pi } , then each nappe of the conical surface, including the apex, is a developable surface.

A cylindrical surface can be viewed as a limiting case of a conical surface whose apex is moved off to infinity in a particular direction. Indeed, in projective geometry a cylindrical surface is just a special case of a conical surface.

See also

  • Conic section
  • Quadric

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