Conics
Learn about this topic in these articles:
analytic geometry
- In analytic geometry: Elementary analytic geometry
…1,800 years with his book Conics. He defined a conic as the intersection of a cone and a plane (see figure). Using Euclid’s results on similar triangles and on secants of circles, he found a relation satisfied by the distances from any point P of a conic to two perpendicular…
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discussed in biography
- In Apollonius of Perga
…“the Great Geometer,” whose treatise Conics is one of the greatest scientific works from the ancient world. Most of his other treatises are now lost, although their titles and a general indication of their contents were passed on by later writers, especially Pappus of Alexandria (fl. c. ad 320). Apollonius’s…
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Greek geometry
- In mathematics: Apollonius
…is best known for his Conics, a treatise in eight books (Books I–IV survive in Greek, V–VII in a medieval Arabic translation; Book VIII is lost). The conic sections are the curves formed when a plane intersects the surface of a cone (or double cone). It is assumed that the…
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