When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?

Given a straight line $D$, a point $F\notin D$ and a positive real number $e$, a conic is a subset of ${\cal P}_2$ defined as: $$ \mathcal{C}(e,F,D) = \{M\in {\cal P}_2,\, d(F,M)=e\,d(M,D) \} $$ where ${\cal P}_2$ is the Euclidean plane and $d$ is the Euclidean distance.

It is well known that when $e$ tends to $0$, ${\cal C}(e,F,D)$ tends to a circle and I would like to see this from this definition without taking any algebraic computations. (we can show this fact from algebraic computations computing the distances in some coordinates system but I would like to avoid this approach.)

I see that $e,F,D$ are not independent in the sense that if $e$ tends to $0$ then $M$ has to tend to $F$ and we do not obtain a circle so there should be some connections between $e$, $D$, $F$. But then it means that the previous definition is not "well-posed". Moreover a conic being defined by a polynomial equation of degree less than 2 (so 5 coefficients seen as parameters), there should not have connection between $e$ (1 parameter), $F$ (2 parameters), and $D$ (2 parameters)... What do I miss here ?

A second point assume there is a connection between $e,F,D$ and I have the feeling that when $e$ tends to $0$ then $D$ as to be seen as a point at infinity. This framework should be related to projective geometry and I would like some developments in this direction so that I can deduce the circle as a limit. An idea is that since we have a point to infinity, the object has to be invariant by any rotation. Moreover it is a convex set so it is a circle... I need to put some maths on this idea and I think projective geometry and the study of a group of transformations acting on the set should lead to find the symmetries.

What do the circle, the ellipse, the parabola and the hyperbola have in common? They are all shapes you get when you slice through a cone. You get a circle when you intersect a cone and a plane that is perpendicular to the cone's axis. When you tilt the plane slightly the circle turns into an ellipse. As you tilt the plane further, it will eventually become parallel to one of the generating lines of the cone — that's a straight line lying on the cone and emanating from the apex. When this happens the intersection is a parabola. When you tilt the plane even further the intersection becomes a hyperbola. If you introduce a second cone so that the two cones touch at their apexes and have the same axis, then the hyperbola actually intersects both parts of this double cone. It's in terms of a double cone that the conic sections are usually defined, which is why we learn that the hyperbola has two disconnected parts (you can find out more about the hyperbola here.)

Use the slider below to incline the plane and see what shape you get (the parabola appears for

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
).



Eccentric conic sections

There is also another way of defining the conic sections, which at first sight appears very different from what we just looked at. Forget about the third dimension for a moment and think of a plane with a line and a point in it. We will call the line the directrix and the point, which is not on the line, a focus. Now think of the shape

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
made by all the points for which the ratio between the distance to the focus and the distance to the directrix is some constant
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
. That constant is called the eccentricity of
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?

It turns out that if

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
then
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is an ellipse, if
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
then
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is a parabola and if
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
then
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is a hyperbola. You can explore this in the applet below. First use the blue slider to arrange the initial set-up: it varies the distance between the directrix and the focus. Then use the black slider to choose the eccentricity
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
. This also illustrates that there are whole families of ellipses, parabolas and hyperbolas: for each value of
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
you get ellipses for all values of
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
, a parabola for
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
and hyperbolas for
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?


The ellipse you get for values of

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is a symmetric object. By reflecting it in its vertical symmetry axis we get another focus point and a second directrix (both shown in the applet). By symmetry the ratio between the distance to the second directrix and the second focus is also equal to
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
As we increase
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
towards
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
the second focus point moves further out to the right. When
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
and
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is a parabola, it has "disappeared to infinity". Then, as we increase
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
beyond
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
the focus point and the second directrix appear from the left and together define the second arm of the hyperbola.

The eccentricity can be thought of as a measure of how far a conic section is away from being a circle. You can see in the applet above that as the value of

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
gets closer to
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
, the corresponding ellipse gets rounder and rounder. (At
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
the conic section reduces to a point, but this doesn’t mean that a shape of eccentricity
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
doesn’t exist — it’s actually a circle! You will find out more below.) As the value of
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
gets larger, the corresponding shape gets flatter; further away from being round.

Connecting the definitions

How are the two definitions of the conic sections connected? To find out, let’s go back to the double cone. It turns out that you can find either one or two spheres that are tangent to (they just touch) both the double cone and the plane

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
that defines the conic sections. These are called Dandelin spheres after the Belgian mathematician Germinal Pierre Dandelin who discovered them in 1822.

Use the slider below to incline the plane

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
(in turquoise) and see the corresponding conic sections and red Dandelin spheres. You get a parabola for the value
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
(See below for an explanation of the other objects appearing in this applet.)


In the case of the ellipse there are two Dandelin spheres, both tangent to the same part of the double cone, in the case of the parabola there is only one, and in the case of the hyperbola there are two again, but this time each is tangent to a different part of the double cone. In the case of the ellipse and the hyperbola the plane

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
that slices the double cone touches the Dandelin spheres in two points. These are exactly the focus points we used for the definition of the conic sections above. The two Dandelin spheres intersect the cone in two circles, which define two planes, shown in green. These planes intersect
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
in straight lines — and these are exactly the directrix lines we used in our definition above. In the case of the parabola there is only one Dandelin sphere, which touches the plane
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
in the point that is the single focus of the ellipse. The intersection of the corresponding green plane with
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
defines the single directrix.

The circle is a special case. It arises when the slicing plane

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is horizontal and the two Dandelin spheres meet
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
at the same point. This means that the two foci coincide. The plane
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is now parallel to the two green planes, so it can’t intersect them. This means that there are no directrix lines; to put it differently, the directrix lines are "out at infinity" and therefore infinitely far away from the focus. The eccentricity of the circle — the ratio between the distance of points on the circle and the focus point to their distance to the directrix — can therefore be thought of as being equal to
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?

But why doesn’t the circle appear in applet 2 above? Instead, the conic section in that applet reduces to a point for

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
The answer is that in applet 2 we vary the eccentricity
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
for a fixed value of the distance
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
between the focus and directrix. By contrast, in applet 3 that distance changes as we change the inclination of the slicing plane
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
To keep
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
constant in applet 3 as we incline the slicing plane towards the horizontal (so the conic section approaches a circle), we would need to also move the plane up the cone at a rate which has
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
reaching the horizontal position exactly when its intersection with the cone consists of the apex only. Observing the conic section change on the plane
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
as we do so would give us exactly the picture we see in the second applet: as the ellipse becomes rounder and rounder it also becomes smaller and smaller — at the point where complete roundness (eccentricity
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
) would be reached, the conic section reduces to a single point.

It turns out that the value of the eccentricity

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
of the conic sections is given by two angles in this picture, which are best understood by taking a side-on view. The angle
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is the one defining the steepness of the cone — for a cone with a vertical axis it’s the angle between the horizontal and a generating line of the cone. The angle
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
is the angle between the horizontal and the plane slicing the cone. It turns out that the eccentricity of the conic section corresponding to a given inclination
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
of the slicing plane is

 
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
   

This tells you immediately that the eccentricity of the circle is

When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
: the circle arises when the slicing plane is parallel to the horizontal, so
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
When the slicing plane is parallel to a generating line of the cone, we have
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
so
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
— that’s the case of the parabola. As the slicing plane is inclined further, so we get a hyperbola,
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
becomes bigger than
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
and tends towards
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
which implies that
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
Drag the point
When the eccentricity of a conic curve tends to infinity the conic curve approaches towards a?
in the applet below to change the inclination of the slicing plane.


People have known about the conic sections since the ancient Greeks. Not only are they staples in geometry, they also find practical applications in the modern world (see Conic section hide and seek). The reason we like them most, though, is that the geometry behind them is beautiful!

About the author

Marianne Freiberger is Editor of Plus.