Right conoid

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Short description: Ruled surface made of lines orthogonal to an axis
A right conoid as a ruled surface.

In geometry, a right conoid is a ruled surface generated by a family of straight lines that all intersect perpendicularly to a fixed straight line, called the axis of the right conoid.

Using a Cartesian coordinate system in three-dimensional space, if we take the z-axis to be the axis of a right conoid, then the right conoid can be represented by the parametric equations:

[math]\displaystyle{ x=v\cos u }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ y=v\sin u }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ z=h(u) }[/math]

where h(u) is some function for representing the height of the moving line.

Examples

Generation of a typical right conoid

A typical example of right conoids is given by the parametric equations

[math]\displaystyle{ x=v\cos u, y=v\sin u, z=2\sin u }[/math]

The image on the right shows how the coplanar lines generate the right conoid.

Other right conoids include:

  • Helicoid: [math]\displaystyle{ x=v\cos u, y=v\sin u, z=cu. }[/math]
  • Whitney umbrella: [math]\displaystyle{ x=vu, y=v, z=u^2. }[/math]
  • Wallis's conical edge: [math]\displaystyle{ x=v\cos u, y=v \sin u, z=c\sqrt{a^2-b^2\cos^2u}. }[/math]
  • Plücker's conoid: [math]\displaystyle{ x=v\cos u, y=v\sin u, z=c\sin nu. }[/math]
  • hyperbolic paraboloid: [math]\displaystyle{ x=v, y=u, z=uv }[/math] (with x-axis and y-axis as its axes).

See also

External links