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Naming and Classification of Curves

Classification of Curves How Curves are Named Other Constructions and Definitions Curve Family Tree Related Web Sites


Classification of Curves

There are many ways to classify curves. One way is to determine whether a curve is the graph of some polynomial equation p[x,y]==0. The graph of a polynomial equation are called algebraic curves. Algebraic curve are assigned an order. The order of an algebraic curve is the degree of the polynomial. For example, line (a x + b y + c == 0); circle ((x+h)^2 + (y+k)^2 -r^2 == 0), or the deltoid ((x^2+y^2)^2 - 8 a x (x^2 - 3 y^2) + 18 a^2 (x^2 + y^2) - 27 a^4 == 0), are algebraic curves. Curves may be easy to trace but are not algebraic. For example, no polynomial's graph can be any of cycloid, equiangular spiral, or quadratrix of Hippias. Algebraic curves with degree greater than 2 are called higher plane curves. Non-algebraic curves are called transcendental curves. To determine whether a curve is algebraic requires graduate level math knowledge, and is beyond this project's scope. Here we will group curves by tracing methods.

There is a special class of curves known as fractal and space-filling curves. Simply, fractal curves are curves that are not smooth. All the curves covered here are such that when you keep magnifying parts of the curve, it'll eventually looks like a line, unless you are magnifying a cusp point. Fractal curves are such that no matter how large you magnify, the curve is still corrugated. In a sense, it's all cusps! Space filling curves are a special class of fractal curves, so named because they completely fill an area. Fractal and space-filling curves are discovered in late 17th century and their existence shocked mathematicians profoundly. They are interesting as a topic but this project will not deal with fractal or space-filling curves. Space-filling curves are also known as Peano curve, after logician Giuseppe Peano. Famous fractals includes the Helge von Koch's "Koch snowflake", David Hilbert's spacing-filling curve, William Gosper's "flowsnake", Benoit Mandelbrot's Mandelbrot set, George Canter's "Canter Dust", and others. (see Related Web Sites)


How Curves are Named

Here are some examples of how curves got named. The list is not exhaustive.

By Person's names: quadratrix of Hippias, conchoid of Nicomedes, Kappa curve, limacon of Pascal, lemniscate of Bernoulli, witch of Agnesi, folium of Descarte, trisectrix of Maclaurin, trident of Newton (aka parabola of Descartes), Bowditch curve, Tschirnhausen's cubic (aka trisectrix of Catalan, L'Hospital's cubic), Cayley's sextic, nephroid of Freeth. Euler's spiral (aka Clothoid ), Euler's curve (x^y==y^x), spiral of Cornu, Durer's conchoid, lissajous (aka Bowditch curve).

Note that in general, the name attached to a curve or a math theorem is not necessary the person who invented or worked on it.

By method of construction: caustics, derivative, integral, isoptic, orthoptic, parallel, pedal, radial, envelope, evolute, involute, cissoid, conchoid, roulette, glissette, strophoid, pursuit curve.

By property: trisectrix, quadratrix, brachistochrone (aka cycloid), tautochrone (aka cycloid), isochrone (aka semi-cubic parabola, semi-cubical parabola), anallagmatic curve.

By shape: astroid (star), deltoid (greek letter Delta) (aka tricuspid, Steiner's hypocycloid), cardioid (hear-shaped), conchoid of Nicomedes (mussel-shaped) (aka cochloid), nephroid (kidney-shaped), cycloid (circle, wheel), folia (leaf), trident of Newton (aka parabola of Descartes), serpentine (snake) (named by Newton), cissoid of Diocles (Ivy-shaped), rose (aka rhodonea), catenary (chain-shaped) (aka chainette, alysoid), tractrix (aka equitangential curve), spiral, lemniscate of Bernoulli (ribbon-shaped), lituus (crook), figure eight curve (aka lemniscate of Gerono), bullet nose, cross curve.

Historical reasons: ellipse, parabola, hyperbola, witch of Agnesi, limacon of Pascal (snail of Pascal, originated from Roberval).

By the form of the formula: semi-cubic parabola (aka isochrone, semi-cubical parabola), Parabola of Descartes (?) (aka trident of Newton).

Not exactly sure (research to do): circle, line, right strophoid (Barrow, 1670), Kampyle of Eudoxus, Kappa curve (Gutschoven's curve), Hippopede (horse fetter) (Proclus, ca.75 BC), bicorn (Sylvester, 1864), piriform (pear-shaped quartic) (De Longchamps, 1886), Clothoid, cochleoid (bernoulli, 1726), Cayley's sextic, Devil's curve (Cramer, 1750).


Other Constructions and Definitions

Brachistochrone (from Greek, brakhus:short, chrone:time) means a curve that connects to two given points such that a particle sliding from the higher point to the lower point under ideal physical law (ideal gravitational force, no friction, no air-resistance, particle has no volume ...etc.) will descent with the fastest time, among all possible curves. The unique solution is the cycloid, not straight line.

Tautochrone (Greek, tauto:same, chrone:time) is similar to brachistochrone. It's a curve that, connects two given points such that it takes the same amount of time for a particle to slide from any point on the curve to the lower point, under ideal physical law. This may sound paradoxical. Intuitively, the longer path the particle needs to glide, the longer time it will have to take. However, consider that acceleration rate is high when the slope is sharp, therefore it is possible for a curve whose curvature balances out so that no matter where the particle starts, it always takes the same time to reach the end. The unique solution is the cycloid.

The word Isochrone (Greek, iso:equal, chrone:time) is sometimes used to mean tautochrone, but other authors use it to mean the semi-cubic parabola -- a curve which a particle will descend equal vertical distances in equal time intervals, under ideal physical law. The latter meaning will be used here.

Anallagmatic curve is any curve that has inversion that's itself. Circle and Cassinian oval are examples.

Isoptic of a given curve C and a given angle α is the locus of a point P such that P is the intersection of tangents of C that meets in angle α. If α:=π/2, then the derived curve is called an orthoptic. For example, the orthoptic of a parabola is its directrix, and the orthoptic of an ellipse, hyperbola, or deltoid is a circle.


Curve Family Tree

The phrases in parenthesis are reminders. Not all curves in this project appears below.

Sinusoidal “spiral” is defined to be r^n==a^n*Cos[n*θ], n rational. It is so-called because it's a “spira” but the radius vector increases and decreases “sinuously”.

Strophoid

Base Curve Pole Fixed Point Strophoid
line not on line on line oblique strophoid
circle center on curve nephroid of Freeth


see Generic Reference Page.

Fractals

Many visual representations of iterative process are called fractals, not all of which are remotely considered curves. There are hundreds fractals resources on the web. Here are few selected ones.

William McWorter. A tutorial on L-systems -- an iterative process that can generate space-filling curves and other fractals. (7 long pages. excellent) http://spanky.triumf.ca/www/fractint/lsys/tutor.html

FractInt has a page that explains various types of fractals. http://spanky.triumf.ca/www/fractint/fractal_types.html. FractInt is an excellent (free) fractal program by coorperative efforts of programers.

Non-linear science FAQ, explains fractals, chaos and others. (excellent) http://www.faqs.org/faqs/sci/nonlinear-faq/

Robert M. Dickau has graphics on fractals and chaos. http://mathforum.org/advanced/robertd/index.html#frac Especially the page on space-filling curves. http://mathforum.org/advanced/robertd/lsys2d.html.

MacTutor short biographies on Giuseppe Peano, Helge von Koch, Benoit Mandelbrot, Gaston Maurice Julia.

Curves

MacTutor Famous Curve Index on Plane Curve terminology.

Silvio Levy/CRC Press. Geometry Formulas and Facts. http://www.geom.umn.edu/docs/reference/CRC-formulas/ In particular the page on Special Plane Curves. http://www.geom.umn.edu/docs/reference/CRC-formulas/node32.html

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Content updated: 1999.
Last modified: 2002-03-28.
© 1995-97 by Xah Lee. (xah@xahlee.org)
http://xahlee.org/SpecialPlaneCurves_dir/specialPlaneCurves.html
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Seashell

Seashells are a showcasing of spirals. There are great variety of spiral shapes. Suppose we start with a circle winding around a spiral.

• The circle can change size periodically, creating a corrugated shell somewhat emulate that of Paper Nautilus 04180001m-s.jpg

• If instead of a circle we have a polygon, we can simulate that of top shells 04020013m-s.jpg painted_top-s.jpg or Thather shell. thatcher-s.jpg or cones 09140046m-s.jpg DSCN0180m-s.jpg

• if the rounding shape periodically changes shape, as to become a star, then we might emulate shells that have horns such as the angaria_delphinula angaria_delphinula-s.jpg pink-mouthed murex 09130071m-s.jpg Venus's Comb 09130032m-s.jpg • the periodic change might also emulate those shell having ribs such as the wentletrap angulate_wentletrap-s.jpg the Harper shell 04170013m-s.jpg

This particular image is generated by the parametric formula:

x = 2*(1 - E^(u/(6*Pi)))*Cos[u]*Cos[v/2]^2,
y = 2*(-1 + E^(u/(6*Pi)))*Cos[v/2]^2*Sin[u],
z = 1 - E^(u/(3*Pi)) - Sin[v] + E^(u/(6*Pi))*Sin[v]}

Graphics code; seashell_wentletrap.nb; shell_para.gcf; shell_para2.gcf; shell_para3.gcf; spindle.gcf corrugated-shell.gcf seashell-tops.gcf seashell-wentletrap.gcf

I offer $5 for anyone who can come up with a parametric formula for the thatcher shell, wentletrap, or Venu's Comb including varios types of murexs that have radiating horns. (Mike Willams has sent me various formulas, see here :20050120-mike_williams.txt

seashell
This photo i took with my camera on 2002. The snail is picked up from the street in Bay Area California USA.

seashell
Tech name: angaria delphinula, of the Delphinula group. Notice the exquisite color and regular horns.
seashell
This type of shell is called wentletrap. The word is originated in German meaning spiral staircase. The characteristics are the creamy white ribs. †
rose murex
This one is called rose-branched murex. It has the typical shape of murexes. ‡
Lataixis Mawae

Lataixis Mawae. A beauty of bizarreness. ‡
seashell
This one is caled painted top, of commonedly called “top” shells because they resembel the toy top. Top shells are characterized by a geometrical flat circular cone. †
seashell
Zebra Auger. Auger shells are long and thing. ‡
seashell
A thatcher shell. How extremely elegant. *
seashell
This one is called Spider Scorpian shell, of the family commonly called Spider Conch Shells. The spider family are characterized by the feet-like horny projections on their opening. One thing special about spider scorpian conch is that it has beautiful purplish openings. Here's a photo of it's spiral.
seashell
These types of shells are called Miter shells, and this is a typical shape. An auger shell are pretty much the same shape but 2 or 3 times longer. ‡
seashell
This is a Salisbury's Spindle, of the spindle shell family. One can see that spindle shells are spindle-like.
seashell
Lamp Chank *
seashell
Episcopal Miter *
seashell
Cowie shells are characterized by their shiny and beautifully patterned surface. Their spiral is not apparent if viewed from the outside. *
seashell
Grove snail †

The biological classification:

Kindom
 Phylum
  Class
   Order
    Family
     Genus
      Species

The shells animals are of Kindom Animalia (that is, animals), and Phylum Mollusca (they are mollusks). Mollusks have two major class: Gastropoda (gastropods) and Bivalvia (bivalves). Gastropods are those with spiral shells. Snails slugs limpets and abalone are all gastropods. Bivalves are those clam-like shells, including mussell, cockle, clam, oyster.


See also

a Photo Exhibition of Seashells

‡ Photo from Encyclopedia of Shells, by Kenneth R. Wye, 1991. amazon.com↗.

† Photo from National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Seashells, by Harald A. Rehder. 1981. amazon.com↗.

* Photo from a big art book.

• The Algorithmic Beauty of Sea Shells. by Hans Meinhardt, Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz, Deborah R. Fowler. amazon.com↗

Here's a collection of Seashell icons made in 2001 by Kate England kate.html

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Content updated: 2003-05
Last modified: 2003-05
© 1995-97 by Xah Lee. (xah@xahlee.org)
http://xahlee.org/SpecialPlaneCurves_dir/specialPlaneCurves.html
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Famous Curves Index

Click on the name of a curve below to see its history and some of its associated curves.
Astroid
Bicorn
Cardioid
Cartesian Oval
Cassinian Ovals
Catenary
Cayley's Sextic
Circle
Cissoid of Diocles
Cochleoid
Conchoid
Conchoid of de Sluze
Cycloid
Devil's Curve
Double Folium
Dürer's Shell Curves
Eight Curve
Ellipse
Epicycloid
Epitrochoid
Equiangular Spiral
Fermat's Spiral
Folium
Folium of Descartes
Freeth's Nephroid
Frequency Curve
Hyperbola
Hyperbolic Spiral
Hypocycloid
Hypotrochoid
Involute of a Circle
Kampyle of Eudoxus
Kappa Curve
Lamé Curves
Lemniscate of Bernoulli
Limacon of Pascal
Lissajous Curves
Lituus
Neile's Parabola
Nephroid
Newton's Parabolas
Parabola
Pearls of de Sluze
Pear-shaped Quartic
Plateau Curves
Pursuit Curve
Quadratrix of Hippias
Rhodonea Curves
Right Strophoid
Serpentine
Sinusoidal Spirals
Spiral of Archimedes
Spiric Sections
Straight Line
Talbot's Curve
Tractrix
Tricuspoid
Trident of Newton
Trifolium
Trisectrix of Maclaurin
Tschirnhaus' Cubic
Watt's Curve
Witch of Agnesi

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Replay the animation
This animation demonstrates how a surface area is generated by revolution and then how the sum of disks results in a volume.



but the surface area is more complicated.


This "SA" for the surface on the left
was calculated using Mathematica®.

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