
In
mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a parabola is a
plane curve which is
mirror-symmetrical and is approximately U-shaped. It fits several superficially different
mathematical descriptions, which can all be proved to define exactly the same curves.
One description of a parabola involves a
point (the
focus) and a
line
Line most often refers to:
* Line (geometry), object with zero thickness and curvature that stretches to infinity
* Telephone line, a single-user circuit on a telephone communication system
Line, lines, The Line, or LINE may also refer to:
Arts ...
(the
directrix). The focus does not lie on the directrix. The parabola is the
locus of points in that plane that are
equidistant from both the directrix and the focus. Another description of a parabola is as a
conic section, created from the intersection of a right circular
conical surface
In geometry, 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 ''dire ...
and a
plane parallel to another plane that is
tangential to the conical surface.
The line perpendicular to the directrix and passing through the focus (that is, the line that splits the parabola through the middle) is called the "axis of symmetry". The point where the parabola intersects its axis of symmetry is called the "
vertex" and is the point where the parabola is most sharply curved. The distance between the vertex and the focus, measured along the axis of symmetry, is the "focal length". The "
latus rectum" is the
chord
Chord may refer to:
* Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously
** Guitar chord a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning
* Chord (geometry), a line segment joining two points on a curve
* Chord ( ...
of the parabola that is parallel to the directrix and passes through the focus. Parabolas can open up, down, left, right, or in some other arbitrary direction. Any parabola can be repositioned and rescaled to fit exactly on any other parabola—that is, all parabolas are geometrically
similar.
Parabolas have the property that, if they are made of material that
reflects light, then light that travels parallel to the axis of symmetry of a parabola and strikes its concave side is reflected to its focus, regardless of where on the parabola the reflection occurs. Conversely, light that originates from a point source at the focus is reflected into a parallel ("
collimated") beam, leaving the parabola parallel to the axis of symmetry. The same effects occur with
sound and other
waves. This reflective property is the basis of many practical uses of parabolas.
The parabola has many important applications, from a
parabolic antenna
A parabolic antenna is an antenna that uses a parabolic reflector, a curved surface with the cross-sectional shape of a parabola, to direct the radio waves. The most common form is shaped like a dish and is popularly called a dish antenna or pa ...
or
parabolic microphone
A parabolic microphone is a microphone that uses a parabolic reflector to collect and focus sound waves onto a transducer, in much the same way that a parabolic antenna (e.g. satellite dish) does with radio waves. Though they lack high fidelity ...
to automobile
headlight reflectors and the design of
ballistic missiles
A ballistic missile is a type of missile that uses projectile motion to deliver warheads on a target. These weapons are guided only during relatively brief periods—most of the flight is unpowered. Short-range ballistic missiles stay within the ...
. It is frequently used in
physics,
engineering, and many other areas.
History

The earliest known work on conic sections was by
Menaechmus in the 4th century BC. He discovered a way to solve the problem of
doubling the cube using parabolas. (The solution, however, does not meet the requirements of
compass-and-straightedge construction
In geometry, straightedge-and-compass construction – also known as ruler-and-compass construction, Euclidean construction, or classical construction – is the construction of lengths, angles, and other geometric figures using only an ideali ...
.) The area enclosed by a parabola and a line segment, the so-called "parabola segment", was computed by
Archimedes
Archimedes of Syracuse (;; ) was a Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, astronomer, and inventor from the ancient city of Syracuse in Sicily. Although few details of his life are known, he is regarded as one of the leading scientists ...
by the
method of exhaustion in the 3rd century BC, in his ''
The Quadrature of the Parabola''. The name "parabola" is due to
Apollonius, who discovered many properties of conic sections. It means "application", referring to "application of areas" concept, that has a connection with this curve, as Apollonius had proved. The focus–directrix property of the parabola and other conic sections is due to
Pappus.
Galileo
Galileo di Vincenzo Bonaiuti de' Galilei (15 February 1564 – 8 January 1642) was an Italian astronomer, physicist and engineer, sometimes described as a polymath. Commonly referred to as Galileo, his name was pronounced (, ). He was ...
showed that the path of a projectile follows a parabola, a consequence of uniform acceleration due to gravity.
The idea that a
parabolic reflector could produce an image was already well known before the invention of the
reflecting telescope. Designs were proposed in the early to mid-17th century by many
mathematicians, including
René Descartes,
Marin Mersenne
Marin Mersenne, OM (also known as Marinus Mersennus or ''le Père'' Mersenne; ; 8 September 1588 – 1 September 1648) was a French polymath whose works touched a wide variety of fields. He is perhaps best known today among mathematicians for ...
, and
James Gregory. When
Isaac Newton built the
first reflecting telescope in 1668, he skipped using a parabolic mirror because of the difficulty of fabrication, opting for a
spherical mirror
A curved mirror is a mirror with a curved reflecting surface. The surface may be either ''convex'' (bulging outward) or ''concave'' (recessed inward). Most curved mirrors have surfaces that are shaped like part of a sphere, but other shapes are ...
. Parabolic mirrors are used in most modern reflecting telescopes and in
satellite dish
A satellite dish is a dish-shaped type of parabolic antenna designed to receive or transmit information by radio waves to or from a communication satellite
A communications satellite is an artificial satellite that relays and amplifies radi ...
es and
radar receivers.
Definition as a locus of points
A parabola can be defined geometrically as a set of points (
locus of points) in the Euclidean plane:
* A parabola is a set of points, such that for any point
of the set the distance
to a fixed point
, the ''focus'', is equal to the distance
to a fixed line
, the ''directrix'':
:
The midpoint
of the perpendicular from the focus
onto the directrix
is called ''vertex'', and the line
is the ''axis of symmetry'' of the parabola.
In a Cartesian coordinate system
Axis of symmetry parallel to the ''y'' axis

If one introduces
Cartesian coordinates
A Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular oriented lines, measured in t ...
, such that
and the directrix has the equation
, one obtains for a point
from
the equation
. Solving for
yields
:
This parabola is U-shaped (''opening to the top'').
The horizontal chord through the focus (see picture in opening section) is called the ''latus rectum''; one half of it is the ''
semi-latus rectum
In mathematics, a conic section, quadratic curve or conic is a curve obtained as the intersection of the surface of a cone with a plane. The three types of conic section are the hyperbola, the parabola, and the ellipse; the circle is a speci ...
''. The latus rectum is parallel to the directrix. The semi-latus rectum is designated by the letter
. From the picture one obtains
:
The latus rectum is defined similarly for the other two conics – the ellipse and the hyperbola. The latus rectum is the line drawn through a focus of a conic section parallel to the directrix and terminated both ways by the curve. For any case,
is the radius of the
osculating circle at the vertex. For a parabola, the semi-latus rectum,
, is the distance of the focus from the directrix. Using the parameter
, the equation of the parabola can be rewritten as
:
More generally, if the vertex is
, the focus
, and the directrix
, one obtains the equation
:
; Remarks:
# In the case of
the parabola has a downward opening.
# The presumption that the ''axis is parallel to the y axis'' allows one to consider a parabola as the graph of a
polynomial of degree 2, and conversely: the graph of an arbitrary polynomial of degree 2 is a parabola (see next section).
# If one exchanges
and
, one obtains equations of the form
. These parabolas open to the left (if
) or to the right (if
).
General position

If the focus is
, and the directrix
, then one obtains the equation
:
(the left side of the equation uses the
Hesse normal form of a line to calculate the distance
).
For a
parametric equation
In mathematics, a parametric equation defines a group of quantities as functions of one or more independent variables called parameters. Parametric equations are commonly used to express the coordinates of the points that make up a geometric obj ...
of a parabola in general position see .
The
implicit equation of a parabola is defined by an
irreducible polynomial of degree two:
:
such that
or, equivalently, such that
is the square of a
linear polynomial.
As a graph of a function

The previous section shows that any parabola with the origin as vertex and the ''y'' axis as axis of symmetry can be considered as the graph of a function
:
For
the parabolas are opening to the top, and for
are opening to the bottom (see picture). From the section above one obtains:
* The ''focus '' is
,
* the ''focal length''
, the ''semi-latus rectum'' is
,
* the ''vertex'' is
,
* the ''directrix'' has the equation
,
* the ''
tangent'' at point
has the equation
.
For
the parabola is the unit parabola with equation
.
Its focus is
, the semi-latus rectum
, and the directrix has the equation
.
The general function of degree 2 is
:
.
Completing the square yields
:
which is the equation of a parabola with
* the axis
(parallel to the ''y'' axis),
* the ''focal length''
, the ''semi-latus rectum''
,
* the ''vertex''
,
* the ''focus''
,
* the ''directrix''
,
* the point of the parabola intersecting the ''y'' axis has coordinates
,
* the ''tangent'' at a point on the ''y'' axis has the equation
.
Similarity to the unit parabola

Two objects in the Euclidean plane are ''
similar'' if one can be transformed to the other by a ''similarity'', that is, an arbitrary
composition of rigid motions (
translations and
rotations
Rotation, or spin, is the circular movement of an object around a '' central axis''. A two-dimensional rotating object has only one possible central axis and can rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. A three-dimensional ...
) and
uniform scalings.
A parabola
with vertex
can be transformed by the translation
to one with the origin as vertex. A suitable rotation around the origin can then transform the parabola to one that has the axis as axis of symmetry. Hence the parabola
can be transformed by a rigid motion to a parabola with an equation
. Such a parabola can then be transformed by the
uniform scaling into the unit parabola with equation
. Thus, any parabola can be mapped to the unit parabola by a similarity.
[.]
A
synthetic Synthetic things are composed of multiple parts, often with the implication that they are artificial. In particular, 'synthetic' may refer to:
Science
* Synthetic chemical or compound, produced by the process of chemical synthesis
* Synthetic o ...
approach, using similar triangles, can also be used to establish this result.
The general result is that two conic sections (necessarily of the same type) are similar if and only if they have the same eccentricity.
Therefore, only circles (all having eccentricity 0) share this property with parabolas (all having eccentricity 1), while general ellipses and hyperbolas do not.
There are other simple affine transformations that map the parabola
onto the unit parabola, such as
. But this mapping is not a similarity, and only shows that all parabolas are affinely equivalent (see ).
As a special conic section

The
pencil of
conic sections with the ''x'' axis as axis of symmetry, one vertex at the origin (0, 0) and the same semi-latus rectum
can be represented by the equation
:
with
the
eccentricity.
* For
the conic is a ''circle'' (osculating circle of the pencil),
* for
an ''ellipse'',
* for
the parabola with equation
* for
a hyperbola (see picture).
In polar coordinates

If , the parabola with equation
(opening to the right) has the
polar representation
:
: (
).
Its vertex is
, and its focus is
.
If one shifts the origin into the focus, that is,
, one obtains the equation
:
''Remark 1:'' Inverting this polar form shows that a parabola is the
inverse
Inverse or invert may refer to:
Science and mathematics
* Inverse (logic), a type of conditional sentence which is an immediate inference made from another conditional sentence
* Additive inverse (negation), the inverse of a number that, when ad ...
of a
cardioid.
''Remark 2:'' The second polar form is a special case of a pencil of conics with focus
(see picture):
:
(
is the eccentricity).
Conic section and quadratic form
Diagram, description, and definitions
Cone with cross-sections
The diagram represents a
cone with its axis . The point A is its
apex. An inclined
cross-section
Cross section may refer to:
* Cross section (geometry)
** Cross-sectional views in architecture & engineering 3D
*Cross section (geology)
* Cross section (electronics)
* Radar cross section, measure of detectability
* Cross section (physics)
**Ab ...
of the cone, shown in pink, is inclined from the axis by the same angle , as the side of the cone. According to the definition of a parabola as a conic section, the boundary of this pink cross-section EPD is a parabola.
A cross-section perpendicular to the axis of the cone passes through the vertex P of the parabola. This cross-section is circular, but appears
elliptical when viewed obliquely, as is shown in the diagram. Its centre is V, and is a diameter. We will call its radius .
Another perpendicular to the axis, circular cross-section of the cone is farther from the apex A than the one just described. It has a
chord
Chord may refer to:
* Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously
** Guitar chord a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning
* Chord (geometry), a line segment joining two points on a curve
* Chord ( ...
, which joins the points where the parabola
intersects the circle. Another chord is the
perpendicular bisector of and is consequently a diameter of the circle. These two chords and the parabola's axis of symmetry all intersect at the point M.
All the labelled points, except D and E, are
coplanar. They are in the plane of symmetry of the whole figure. This includes the point F, which is not mentioned above. It is defined and discussed below, in .
Let us call the length of and of , and the length of .
Derivation of quadratic equation
The lengths of and are:
:
(triangle BPM is
isosceles, because
),
:
(PMCK is a
parallelogram
In Euclidean geometry, a parallelogram is a simple (non- self-intersecting) quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides. The opposite or facing sides of a parallelogram are of equal length and the opposite angles of a parallelogram are of equa ...
).
Using the
intersecting chords theorem
The intersecting chords theorem or just the chord theorem is a statement in elementary geometry that describes a relation of the four line segments created by two intersecting chords within a circle.
It states that the products of the lengths ...
on the chords and , we get
:
Substituting:
:
Rearranging:
:
For any given cone and parabola, and are constants, but and are variables that depend on the arbitrary height at which the horizontal cross-section BECD is made. This last equation shows the relationship between these variables. They can be interpreted as
Cartesian coordinates
A Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular oriented lines, measured in t ...
of the points D and E, in a system in the pink plane with P as its origin. Since is squared in the equation, the fact that D and E are on opposite sides of the axis is unimportant. If the horizontal cross-section moves up or down, toward or away from the apex of the cone, D and E move along the parabola, always maintaining the relationship between and shown in the equation. The parabolic curve is therefore the
locus of points where the equation is satisfied, which makes it a
Cartesian graph of the quadratic function in the equation.
Focal length
It is proved in a
preceding section that if a parabola has its vertex at the origin, and if it opens in the positive direction, then its equation is , where is its focal length. Comparing this with the last equation above shows that the focal length of the parabola in the cone is .
Position of the focus
In the diagram above, the point V is the
foot of the perpendicular from the vertex of the parabola to the axis of the cone. ''The point F is the foot of the perpendicular from the point V to the plane of the parabola.'' By symmetry, F is on the axis of symmetry of the parabola. Angle VPF is
complementary to , and angle PVF is complementary to angle VPF, therefore angle PVF is . Since the length of is , the distance of F from the vertex of the parabola is . It is shown above that this distance equals the focal length of the parabola, which is the distance from the vertex to the focus. The focus and the point F are therefore equally distant from the vertex, along the same line, which implies that they are the same point. Therefore, ''the point F, defined above, is the focus of the parabola''.
This discussion started from the definition of a parabola as a conic section, but it has now led to a description as a graph of a quadratic function. This shows that these two descriptions are equivalent. They both define curves of exactly the same shape.
Alternative proof with Dandelin spheres
Parabola (red): side projection view and top projection view of a cone with a Dandelin sphere
An alternative proof can be done using
Dandelin spheres In geometry, the Dandelin spheres are one or two spheres that are tangent both to a plane and to a cone that intersects the plane. The intersection of the cone and the plane is a conic section, and the point at which either sphere touches the plane ...
. It works without calculation and uses elementary geometric considerations only (see the derivation below).
The intersection of an upright cone by a plane
, whose inclination from vertical is the same as a
generatrix (a.k.a. generator line, a line containing the apex and a point on the cone surface)
of the cone, is a parabola (red curve in the diagram).
This generatrix
is the only generatrix of the cone that is parallel to plane
. Otherwise, if there are two generatrices parallel to the intersecting plane, the intersection curve will be a
hyperbola (or
degenerate hyperbola, if the two generatrices are in the intersecting plane). If there is no generatrix parallel to the intersecting plane, the intersection curve will be an
ellipse
In mathematics, an ellipse is a plane curve surrounding two focus (geometry), focal points, such that for all points on the curve, the sum of the two distances to the focal points is a constant. It generalizes a circle, which is the special ty ...
or a
circle (or
a point).
Let plane
be the plane that contains the vertical axis of the cone and line
. The inclination of plane
from vertical is the same as line
means that, viewing from the side (that is, the plane
is perpendicular to plane
),
.
In order to prove the directrix property of a parabola (see above), one uses a
Dandelin sphere In geometry, the Dandelin spheres are one or two spheres that are tangent both to a plane and to a cone that intersects the plane. The intersection of the cone and the plane is a conic section, and the point at which either sphere touches the plane ...
, which is a sphere that touches the cone along a circle
and plane
at point
. The plane containing the circle
intersects with plane
at line
. There is a
mirror symmetry in the system consisting of plane
, Dandelin sphere
and the cone (the
plane of symmetry is
).
Since the plane containing the circle
is perpendicular to plane
, and
, their intersection line
must also be perpendicular to plane
. Since line
is in plane
,
.
It turns out that
is the ''focus'' of the parabola, and
is the ''directrix'' of the parabola.
# Let
be an arbitrary point of the intersection curve.
# The
generatrix of the cone containing
intersects circle
at point
.
# The line segments
and
are tangential to the sphere
, and hence are of equal length.
# Generatrix
intersects the circle
at point
. The line segments
and
are tangential to the sphere
, and hence are of equal length.
# Let line
be the line parallel to
and passing through point
. Since
, and point
is in plane
, line
must be in plane
. Since
, we know that
as well.
# Let point
be ''the foot of the perpendicular'' from point
to line
, that is,
is a segment of line
, and hence
.
# From
intercept theorem and
we know that
. Since
, we know that
, which means that the distance from
to the focus
is equal to the distance from
to the directrix
.
Proof of the reflective property

The reflective property states that if a parabola can reflect light, then light that enters it travelling parallel to the axis of symmetry is reflected toward the focus. This is derived from
geometrical optics, based on the assumption that light travels in rays.
Consider the parabola . Since all parabolas are similar, this simple case represents all others.
Construction and definitions
The point E is an arbitrary point on the parabola. The focus is F, the vertex is A (the origin), and the line is the axis of symmetry. The line is parallel to the axis of symmetry and intersects the axis at D. The point B is the midpoint of the line segment .
Deductions
The vertex A is equidistant from the focus F and from the directrix. Since C is on the directrix, the coordinates of F and C are equal in absolute value and opposite in sign. B is the midpoint of . Its coordinate is half that of D, that is, . The slope of the line is the quotient of the lengths of and , which is . But is also the slope (first derivative) of the parabola at E. Therefore, the line is the tangent to the parabola at E.
The distances and are equal because E is on the parabola, F is the focus and C is on the directrix. Therefore, since B is the midpoint of , triangles △FEB and △CEB are congruent (three sides), which implies that the angles marked are congruent. (The angle above E is vertically opposite angle ∠BEC.) This means that a ray of light that enters the parabola and arrives at E travelling parallel to the axis of symmetry will be reflected by the line so it travels along the line , as shown in red in the diagram (assuming that the lines can somehow reflect light). Since is the tangent to the parabola at E, the same reflection will be done by an infinitesimal arc of the parabola at E. Therefore, light that enters the parabola and arrives at E travelling parallel to the axis of symmetry of the parabola is reflected by the parabola toward its focus.
This conclusion about reflected light applies to all points on the parabola, as is shown on the left side of the diagram. This is the reflective property.
Other consequences
There are other theorems that can be deduced simply from the above argument.
Tangent bisection property
The above proof and the accompanying diagram show that the tangent bisects the angle ∠FEC. In other words, the tangent to the parabola at any point bisects the angle between the lines joining the point to the focus and perpendicularly to the directrix.
Intersection of a tangent and perpendicular from focus

Since triangles △FBE and △CBE are congruent, is perpendicular to the tangent . Since B is on the axis, which is the tangent to the parabola at its vertex, it follows that the point of intersection between any tangent to a parabola and the perpendicular from the focus to that tangent lies on the line that is tangential to the parabola at its vertex. See animated diagram
and
pedal curve.
Reflection of light striking the convex side
If light travels along the line , it moves parallel to the axis of symmetry and strikes the convex side of the parabola at E. It is clear from the above diagram that this light will be reflected directly away from the focus, along an extension of the segment .
Alternative proofs

The above proofs of the reflective and tangent bisection properties use a line of calculus. Here a geometric proof is presented.
In this diagram, F is the focus of the parabola, and T and U lie on its directrix. P is an arbitrary point on the parabola. is perpendicular to the directrix, and the line bisects angle ∠FPT. Q is another point on the parabola, with perpendicular to the directrix. We know that = and = . Clearly, > , so > . All points on the bisector are equidistant from F and T, but Q is closer to F than to T. This means that Q is to the left of , that is, on the same side of it as the focus. The same would be true if Q were located anywhere else on the parabola (except at the point P), so the entire parabola, except the point P, is on the focus side of . Therefore, is the tangent to the parabola at P. Since it bisects the angle ∠FPT, this proves the tangent bisection property.
The logic of the last paragraph can be applied to modify the above proof of the reflective property. It effectively proves the line to be the tangent to the parabola at E if the angles are equal. The reflective property follows as shown previously.
Pin and string construction

The definition of a parabola by its focus and directrix can be used for drawing it with help of pins and strings:
# Choose the ''focus''
and the ''directrix''
of the parabola.
# Take a triangle of a ''set square'' and prepare a ''string'' with length
(see diagram).
# Pin one end of the string at point
of the triangle and the other one to the focus
.
# Position the triangle such that the second edge of the right angle is free to ''slide'' along the directrix.
# Take a ''pen'' and hold the string tight to the triangle.
# While moving the triangle along the directrix, the pen ''draws'' an arc of a parabola, because of
(see definition of a parabola).
Properties related to Pascal's theorem
A parabola can be considered as the affine part of a non-degenerated projective conic with a point
on the line of infinity
, which is the tangent at
. The 5-, 4- and 3- point degenerations of
Pascal's theorem are properties of a conic dealing with at least one tangent. If one considers this tangent as the line at infinity and its point of contact as the point at infinity of the ''y'' axis, one obtains three statements for a parabola.
The following properties of a parabola deal only with terms ''connect'', ''intersect'', ''parallel'', which are invariants of
similarities. So, it is sufficient to prove any property for the ''unit parabola'' with equation
.
4-points property

Any parabola can be described in a suitable coordinate system by an equation
.
* Let
be four points of the parabola
, and
the intersection of the secant line
with the line
and let
be the intersection of the secant line
with the line
(see picture). Then the secant line
is parallel to line
.
: (The lines
and
are parallel to the axis of the parabola.)
''Proof:'' straightforward calculation for the unit parabola
.
''Application:'' The 4-points property of a parabola can be used for the construction of point
, while
and
are given.
''Remark:'' the 4-points property of a parabola is an affine version of the 5-point degeneration of Pascal's theorem.
3-points–1-tangent property

Let
be three points of the parabola with equation
and
the intersection of the secant line
with the line
and
the intersection of the secant line
with the line
(see picture). Then the tangent at point
is parallel to the line
.
(The lines
and
are parallel to the axis of the parabola.)
''Proof:'' can be performed for the unit parabola
. A short calculation shows: line
has slope
which is the slope of the tangent at point
.
''Application:'' The 3-points-1-tangent-property of a parabola can be used for the construction of the tangent at point
, while
are given.
''Remark:'' The 3-points-1-tangent-property of a parabola is an affine version of the 4-point-degeneration of Pascal's theorem.
2-points–2-tangents property

Let
be two points of the parabola with equation
, and
the intersection of the tangent at point
with the line
, and
the intersection of the tangent at point
with the line
(see picture). Then the secant
is parallel to the line
.
(The lines
and
are parallel to the axis of the parabola.)
''Proof:'' straight forward calculation for the unit parabola
.
''Application:'' The 2-points–2-tangents property can be used for the construction of the tangent of a parabola at point
, if
and the tangent at
are given.
''Remark 1:'' The 2-points–2-tangents property of a parabola is an affine version of the 3-point degeneration of Pascal's theorem.
''Remark 2:'' The 2-points–2-tangents property should not be confused with the following property of a parabola, which also deals with 2 points and 2 tangents, but is ''not'' related to Pascal's theorem.
Axis direction

The statements above presume the knowledge of the axis direction of the parabola, in order to construct the points
. The following property determines the points
by two given points and their tangents only, and the result is that the line
is parallel to the axis of the parabola.
Let
#
be two points of the parabola
, and
be their tangents;
#
be the intersection of the tangents
,
#
be the intersection of the parallel line to
through
with the parallel line to
through
(see picture).
Then the line
is parallel to the axis of the parabola and has the equation
''Proof:'' can be done (like the properties above) for the unit parabola
.
''Application:'' This property can be used to determine the direction of the axis of a parabola, if two points and their tangents are given. An alternative way is to determine the midpoints of two parallel chords, see
section on parallel chords.
''Remark:'' This property is an affine version of the theorem of two ''perspective triangles'' of a non-degenerate conic.
Steiner generation
Parabola
Steiner established the following procedure for the construction of a non-degenerate conic (see
Steiner conic):
* Given two
pencils of lines at two points
(all lines containing
and
respectively) and a projective but not perspective mapping
of
onto
, the intersection points of corresponding lines form a non-degenerate projective conic section.
This procedure can be used for a simple construction of points on the parabola
:
* Consider the pencil at the vertex
and the set of lines
that are parallel to the ''y'' axis.
# Let
be a point on the parabola, and
,
.
# The line segment
is divided into ''n'' equally spaced segments, and this division is projected (in the direction
) onto the line segment
(see figure). This projection gives rise to a projective mapping
from pencil
onto the pencil
.
# The intersection of the line
and the ''i''-th parallel to the ''y'' axis is a point on the parabola.
''Proof:'' straightforward calculation.
''Remark:'' Steiner's generation is also available for
ellipse
In mathematics, an ellipse is a plane curve surrounding two focus (geometry), focal points, such that for all points on the curve, the sum of the two distances to the focal points is a constant. It generalizes a circle, which is the special ty ...
s and
hyperbolas.
Dual parabola

A ''dual parabola'' consists of the set of tangents of an ordinary parabola.
The Steiner generation of a conic can be applied to the generation of a dual conic by changing the meanings of points and lines:
* Let be given two point sets on two lines
, and a projective but not perspective mapping
between these point sets, then the connecting lines of corresponding points form a non degenerate dual conic.
In order to generate elements of a dual parabola, one starts with
# three points
not on a line,
# divides the line sections
and
each into
equally spaced line segments and adds numbers as shown in the picture.
# Then the lines
are tangents of a parabola, hence elements of a dual parabola.
# The parabola is a
Bezier curve of degree 2 with the control points
.
The ''proof'' is a consequence of the ''
de Casteljau algorithm'' for a Bezier curve of degree 2.
Inscribed angles and the 3-point form

A parabola with equation
is uniquely determined by three points
with different ''x'' coordinates. The usual procedure to determine the coefficients
is to insert the point coordinates into the equation. The result is a linear system of three equations, which can be solved by
Gaussian elimination
In mathematics, Gaussian elimination, also known as row reduction, is an algorithm for solving systems of linear equations. It consists of a sequence of operations performed on the corresponding matrix of coefficients. This method can also be used ...
or
Cramer's rule
In linear algebra, Cramer's rule is an explicit formula for the solution of a system of linear equations with as many equations as unknowns, valid whenever the system has a unique solution. It expresses the solution in terms of the determinants o ...
, for example. An alternative way uses the ''inscribed angle theorem'' for parabolas.
In the following, the angle of two lines will be measured by the difference of the slopes of the line with respect to the directrix of the parabola. That is, for a parabola of equation
the angle between two lines of equations
is measured by
Analogous to the
inscribed angle theorem for circles, one has the ''inscribed angle theorem for parabolas'':
: Four points
with different coordinates (see picture) are on a parabola with equation
if and only if the angles at
and
have the same measure, as defined above. That is,
:
(Proof: straightforward calculation: If the points are on a parabola, one may translate the coordinates for having the equation
, then one has
if the points are on the parabola.)
A consequence is that the equation (in
) of the parabola determined by 3 points
with different coordinates is (if two coordinates are equal, there is no parabola with directrix parallel to the axis, which passes through the points)
:
Multiplying by the denominators that depend on
one obtains the more standard form
:
Pole–polar relation

In a suitable coordinate system any parabola can be described by an equation
. The equation of the tangent at a point
is
:
One obtains the function
:
on the set of points of the parabola onto the set of tangents.
Obviously, this function can be extended onto the set of all points of
to a bijection between the points of
and the lines with equations
. The inverse mapping is
: line
→ point
.
This relation is called the ''
pole–polar relation of the parabola'', where the point is the ''pole'', and the corresponding line its ''polar''.
By calculation, one checks the following properties of the pole–polar relation of the parabola:
* For a point (pole) ''on'' the parabola, the polar is the tangent at this point (see picture:
).
* For a pole
''outside'' the parabola the intersection points of its polar with the parabola are the touching points of the two tangents passing
(see picture:
).
* For a point ''within'' the parabola the polar has no point with the parabola in common (see picture:
and
).
* The intersection point of two polar lines (for example,
) is the pole of the connecting line of their poles (in example:
).
* Focus and directrix of the parabola are a pole–polar pair.
''Remark:'' Pole–polar relations also exist for ellipses and hyperbolas.
Tangent properties
Two tangent properties related to the latus rectum
Let the line of symmetry intersect the parabola at point Q, and denote the focus as point F and its distance from point Q as . Let the perpendicular to the line of symmetry, through the focus, intersect the parabola at a point T. Then (1) the distance from F to T is , and (2) a tangent to the parabola at point T intersects the line of symmetry at a 45° angle.
Orthoptic property
If two tangents to a parabola are perpendicular to each other, then they intersect on the directrix. Conversely, two tangents that intersect on the directrix are perpendicular. In other words, at any point on the directrix the whole parabola subtends a right angle.
Lambert's theorem
Let three tangents to a parabola form a triangle. Then
Lambert's theorem states that the focus of the parabola lies on the
circumcircle of the triangle.
[
Tsukerman's converse to Lambert's theorem states that, given three lines that bound a triangle, if two of the lines are tangent to a parabola whose focus lies on the circumcircle of the triangle, then the third line is also tangent to the parabola.]
Facts related to chords and arcs
Focal length calculated from parameters of a chord
Suppose a chord
Chord may refer to:
* Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously
** Guitar chord a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning
* Chord (geometry), a line segment joining two points on a curve
* Chord ( ...
crosses a parabola perpendicular to its axis of symmetry. Let the length of the chord between the points where it intersects the parabola be and the distance from the vertex of the parabola to the chord, measured along the axis of symmetry, be . The focal length, , of the parabola is given by
:
;Proof:
Suppose a system of Cartesian coordinates is used such that the vertex of the parabola is at the origin, and the axis of symmetry is the axis. The parabola opens upward. It is shown elsewhere in this article that the equation of the parabola is , where is the focal length. At the positive end of the chord, and . Since this point is on the parabola, these coordinates must satisfy the equation above. Therefore, by substitution, . From this, .
Area enclosed between a parabola and a chord
The area enclosed between a parabola and a chord (see diagram) is two-thirds of the area of a parallelogram that surrounds it. One side of the parallelogram is the chord, and the opposite side is a tangent to the parabola. The slope of the other parallel sides is irrelevant to the area. Often, as here, they are drawn parallel with the parabola's axis of symmetry, but this is arbitrary.
A theorem equivalent to this one, but different in details, was derived by Archimedes
Archimedes of Syracuse (;; ) was a Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, astronomer, and inventor from the ancient city of Syracuse in Sicily. Although few details of his life are known, he is regarded as one of the leading scientists ...
in the 3rd century BCE. He used the areas of triangles, rather than that of the parallelogram. See The Quadrature of the Parabola.
If the chord has length and is perpendicular to the parabola's axis of symmetry, and if the perpendicular distance from the parabola's vertex to the chord is , the parallelogram is a rectangle, with sides of and . The area of the parabolic segment enclosed by the parabola and the chord is therefore
:
This formula can be compared with the area of a triangle: .
In general, the enclosed area can be calculated as follows. First, locate the point on the parabola where its slope equals that of the chord. This can be done with calculus, or by using a line that is parallel to the axis of symmetry of the parabola and passes through the midpoint of the chord. The required point is where this line intersects the parabola. Then, using the formula given in Distance from a point to a line, calculate the perpendicular distance from this point to the chord. Multiply this by the length of the chord to get the area of the parallelogram, then by 2/3 to get the required enclosed area.
Corollary concerning midpoints and endpoints of chords
A corollary of the above discussion is that if a parabola has several parallel chords, their midpoints all lie on a line parallel to the axis of symmetry. If tangents to the parabola are drawn through the endpoints of any of these chords, the two tangents intersect on this same line parallel to the axis of symmetry (see Axis-direction of a parabola).
Arc length
If a point X is located on a parabola with focal length , and if is the perpendicular distance from X to the axis of symmetry of the parabola, then the lengths of arcs of the parabola that terminate at X can be calculated from and as follows, assuming they are all expressed in the same units.
:
This quantity is the length of the arc between X and the vertex of the parabola.
The length of the arc between X and the symmetrically opposite point on the other side of the parabola is .
The perpendicular distance can be given a positive or negative sign to indicate on which side of the axis of symmetry X is situated. Reversing the sign of reverses the signs of and without changing their absolute values. If these quantities are signed, ''the length of the arc between ''any'' two points on the parabola is always shown by the difference between their values of ''. The calculation can be simplified by using the properties of logarithms:
:
This can be useful, for example, in calculating the size of the material needed to make a parabolic reflector or parabolic trough.
This calculation can be used for a parabola in any orientation. It is not restricted to the situation where the axis of symmetry is parallel to the ''y'' axis.
A geometrical construction to find a sector area
S is the focus, and V is the principal vertex of the parabola VG. Draw VX perpendicular to SV.
Take any point B on VG and drop a perpendicular BQ from B to VX. Draw perpendicular ST intersecting BQ, extended if necessary, at T. At B draw the perpendicular BJ, intersecting VX at J.
For the parabola, the segment VBV, the area enclosed by the chord VB and the arc VB, is equal to ∆VBQ / 3, also .
The area of the parabolic sector SVB = ∆SVB + ∆VBQ / 3.
Since triangles TSB and QBJ are similar,
:
Therefore, the area of the parabolic sector and can be found from the length of VJ, as found above.
A circle through S, V and B also passes through J.
Conversely, if a point, B on the parabola VG is to be found so that the area of the sector SVB is equal to a specified value, determine the point J on VX and construct a circle through S, V and J. Since SJ is the diameter, the center of the circle is at its midpoint, and it lies on the perpendicular bisector of SV, a distance of one half VJ from SV. The required point B is where this circle intersects the parabola.
If a body traces the path of the parabola due to an inverse square force directed towards S, the area SVB increases at a constant rate as point B moves forward. It follows that J moves at constant speed along VX as B moves along the parabola.
If the speed of the body at the vertex where it is moving perpendicularly to SV is ''v'', then the speed of J is equal to 3''v''/4.
The construction can be extended simply to include the case where neither radius coincides with the axis SV as follows. Let A be a fixed point on VG between V and B, and point H be the intersection on VX with the perpendicular to SA at A. From the above, the area of the parabolic sector .
Conversely, if it is required to find the point B for a particular area SAB, find point J from HJ and point B as before. By Book 1, Proposition 16, Corollary 6 of Newton's ''Principia'', the speed of a body moving along a parabola with a force directed towards the focus is inversely proportional to the square root of the radius. If the speed at A is ''v'', then at the vertex V it is , and point J moves at a constant speed of .
The above construction was devised by Isaac Newton and can be found in Book 1 of Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica
(English: ''Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy'') often referred to as simply the (), is a book by Isaac Newton that expounds Newton's laws of motion and his law of universal gravitation. The ''Principia'' is written in Latin and ...
as Proposition 30.
Focal length and radius of curvature at the vertex
The focal length of a parabola is half of its radius of curvature at its vertex.
;Proof:
File:Huygens + Snell + van Ceulen - regular polygon doubling.svg, Image is inverted. AB is axis. C is origin. O is center. A is . OA = OC = . PA = . CP = . OP = . Other points and lines are irrelevant for this purpose.
File:Parabola circle.svg, The radius of curvature at the vertex is twice the focal length. The measurements shown on the above diagram are in units of the latus rectum, which is four times the focal length.
File:Concave mirror.svg
Consider a point on a circle of radius and with center at the point . The circle passes through the origin. If the point is near the origin, the Pythagorean theorem
In mathematics, the Pythagorean theorem or Pythagoras' theorem is a fundamental relation in Euclidean geometry between the three sides of a right triangle. It states that the area of the square whose side is the hypotenuse (the side opposite t ...
shows that
:
But if is extremely close to the origin, since the axis is a tangent to the circle, is very small compared with , so is negligible compared with the other terms. Therefore, extremely close to the origin
: (1)
Compare this with the parabola
: (2)
which has its vertex at the origin, opens upward, and has focal length (see preceding sections of this article).
Equations (1) and (2) are equivalent if . Therefore, this is the condition for the circle and parabola to coincide at and extremely close to the origin. The radius of curvature at the origin, which is the vertex of the parabola, is twice the focal length.
; Corollary:
A concave mirror that is a small segment of a sphere behaves approximately like a parabolic mirror, focusing parallel light to a point midway between the centre and the surface of the sphere.
As the affine image of the unit parabola
Another definition of a parabola uses affine transformation
In Euclidean geometry, an affine transformation or affinity (from the Latin, ''affinis'', "connected with") is a geometric transformation that preserves lines and parallelism, but not necessarily Euclidean distances and angles.
More generally, ...
s:
* Any ''parabola'' is the affine image of the unit parabola with equation .
;parametric representation
An affine transformation of the Euclidean plane has the form , where is a regular matrix ( determinant is not 0), and is an arbitrary vector. If are the column vectors of the matrix , the unit parabola is mapped onto the parabola
:
where
: is a ''point'' of the parabola,
: is a ''tangent vector'' at point ,
: is ''parallel to the axis'' of the parabola (axis of symmetry through the vertex).
;vertex
In general, the two vectors are not perpendicular, and is ''not'' the vertex, unless the affine transformation is a similarity.
The tangent vector at the point is . At the vertex the tangent vector is orthogonal to . Hence the parameter of the vertex is the solution of the equation
:
which is
:
and the ''vertex'' is
:
;focal length and focus
The ''focal length'' can be determined by a suitable parameter transformation (which does not change the geometric shape of the parabola). The focal length is
:
Hence the ''focus'' of the parabola is
:
;implicit representation
Solving the parametric representation for by Cramer's rule
In linear algebra, Cramer's rule is an explicit formula for the solution of a system of linear equations with as many equations as unknowns, valid whenever the system has a unique solution. It expresses the solution in terms of the determinants o ...
and using , one gets the implicit representation
:.
;parabola in space
The definition of a parabola in this section gives a parametric representation of an arbitrary parabola, even in space, if one allows to be vectors in space.
As quadratic Bézier curve
A quadratic Bézier curve is a curve defined by three points , and , called its ''control points'':
:
This curve is an arc of a parabola (see ).
Numerical integration
In one method of numerical integration one replaces the graph of a function by arcs of parabolas and integrates the parabola arcs. A parabola is determined by three points. The formula for one arc is
:
The method is called Simpson's rule.
As plane section of quadric
The following quadrics contain parabolas as plane sections:
* elliptical cone,
* parabolic cylinder,
* elliptical paraboloid,
* hyperbolic paraboloid,
* hyperboloid
In geometry, a hyperboloid of revolution, sometimes called a circular hyperboloid, is the surface generated by rotating a hyperbola around one of its principal axes. A hyperboloid is the surface obtained from a hyperboloid of revolution by defo ...
of one sheet,
* hyperboloid of two sheets.
File:Quadric Cone.jpg, Elliptic cone
File:Parabolic Cylinder Quadric.png, Parabolic cylinder
File:Paraboloid.png, Elliptic paraboloid
File:Hyperbol Paraboloid.pov.png, Hyperbolic paraboloid
File:Hyperboloid1.png, Hyperboloid of one sheet
File:Hyperboloid2.png, Hyperboloid of two sheets
As trisectrix
A parabola can be used as a trisectrix, that is it allows the Angle trisection, exact trisection of an arbitrary angle with straightedge and compass. This is not in contradiction to the impossibility of an angle trisection with compass-and-straightedge construction
In geometry, straightedge-and-compass construction – also known as ruler-and-compass construction, Euclidean construction, or classical construction – is the construction of lengths, angles, and other geometric figures using only an ideali ...
s alone, as the use of parabolas is not allowed in the classic rules for compass-and-straightedge constructions.
To trisect , place its leg on the ''x'' axis such that the vertex is in the coordinate system's origin. The coordinate system also contains the parabola . The unit circle with radius 1 around the origin intersects the angle's other leg , and from this point of intersection draw the perpendicular onto the ''y'' axis. The parallel to ''y'' axis through the midpoint of that perpendicular and the tangent on the unit circle in intersect in . The circle around with radius intersects the parabola at . The perpendicular from onto the ''x'' axis intersects the unit circle at , and is exactly one third of .
The correctness of this construction can be seen by showing that the ''x'' coordinate of is . Solving the equation system given by the circle around and the parabola leads to the cubic equation . The List of trigonometric identities#Triple-angle formulae, triple-angle formula then shows that is indeed a solution of that cubic equation.
This trisection goes back to René Descartes, who described it in his book (1637).
Generalizations
If one replaces the real numbers by an arbitrary Field (mathematics), field, many geometric properties of the parabola are still valid:
# A line intersects in at most two points.
# At any point the line is the tangent.
Essentially new phenomena arise, if the field has characteristic 2 (that is, ): the tangents are all parallel.
In algebraic geometry, the parabola is generalized by the rational normal curves, which have coordinates ; the standard parabola is the case , and the case is known as the twisted cubic. A further generalization is given by the Veronese variety, when there is more than one input variable.
In the theory of quadratic forms, the parabola is the graph of the quadratic form (or other scalings), while the elliptic paraboloid is the graph of the Definite bilinear form, positive-definite quadratic form (or scalings), and the hyperbolic paraboloid is the graph of the indefinite quadratic form . Generalizations to more variables yield further such objects.
The curves for other values of are traditionally referred to as the higher parabolas and were originally treated implicitly, in the form for and both positive integers, in which form they are seen to be algebraic curves. These correspond to the explicit formula for a positive fractional power of . Negative fractional powers correspond to the implicit equation and are traditionally referred to as higher hyperbolas. Analytically, can also be raised to an irrational power (for positive values of ); the analytic properties are analogous to when is raised to rational powers, but the resulting curve is no longer algebraic and cannot be analyzed by algebraic geometry.
In the physical world
In nature, approximations of parabolas and paraboloids are found in many diverse situations. The best-known instance of the parabola in the history of physics is the trajectory of a particle or body in motion under the influence of a uniform gravitational field without air resistance (for instance, a ball flying through the air, neglecting air friction).
The Projectile motion, parabolic trajectory of projectiles was discovered experimentally in the early 17th century by Galileo, who performed experiments with balls rolling on inclined planes. He also later proved this mathematically in his book ''Dialogue Concerning Two New Sciences''. For objects extended in space, such as a diver jumping from a diving board, the object itself follows a complex motion as it rotates, but the center of mass of the object nevertheless moves along a parabola. As in all cases in the physical world, the trajectory is always an approximation of a parabola. The presence of air resistance, for example, always distorts the shape, although at low speeds, the shape is a good approximation of a parabola. At higher speeds, such as in ballistics, the shape is highly distorted and doesn't resemble a parabola.
Another hypothetical situation in which parabolas might arise, according to the theories of physics described in the 17th and 18th centuries by Sir Isaac Newton, is in two-body orbits, for example, the path of a small planetoid or other object under the influence of the gravitation of the Sun. Parabolic orbits do not occur in nature; simple orbits most commonly resemble hyperbolas or ellipse
In mathematics, an ellipse is a plane curve surrounding two focus (geometry), focal points, such that for all points on the curve, the sum of the two distances to the focal points is a constant. It generalizes a circle, which is the special ty ...
s. The parabolic orbit is the degeneracy (math), degenerate intermediate case between those two types of ideal orbit. An object following a parabolic orbit would travel at the exact escape velocity of the object it orbits; objects in elliptical orbit, elliptical or hyperbolic orbit, hyperbolic orbits travel at less or greater than escape velocity, respectively. Long-period comets travel close to the Sun's escape velocity while they are moving through the inner Solar system, so their paths are nearly parabolic.
Approximations of parabolas are also found in the shape of the main cables on a simple suspension bridge. The curve of the chains of a suspension bridge is always an intermediate curve between a parabola and a catenary, but in practice the curve is generally nearer to a parabola due to the weight of the load (i.e. the road) being much larger than the cables themselves, and in calculations the second-degree polynomial formula of a parabola is used.[
] Under the influence of a uniform load (such as a horizontal suspended deck), the otherwise catenary-shaped cable is deformed toward a parabola (see Catenary#Suspension bridge curve). Unlike an inelastic chain, a freely hanging spring of zero unstressed length takes the shape of a parabola. Suspension-bridge cables are, ideally, purely in tension, without having to carry other forces, for example, bending. Similarly, the structures of parabolic arches are purely in compression.
Paraboloids arise in several physical situations as well. The best-known instance is the parabolic reflector, which is a mirror or similar reflective device that concentrates light or other forms of electromagnetic radiation to a common Focus (optics), focal point, or conversely, collimates light from a point source at the focus into a parallel beam. The principle of the parabolic reflector may have been discovered in the 3rd century BC by the geometer Archimedes
Archimedes of Syracuse (;; ) was a Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, astronomer, and inventor from the ancient city of Syracuse in Sicily. Although few details of his life are known, he is regarded as one of the leading scientists ...
, who, according to a dubious legend, constructed parabolic mirrors to defend Syracuse, Italy, Syracuse against the Roman Empire, Roman fleet, by concentrating the sun's rays to set fire to the decks of the Roman ships. The principle was applied to telescopes in the 17th century. Today, paraboloid reflectors can be commonly observed throughout much of the world in microwave and satellite-dish receiving and transmitting antennas.
In parabolic microphone
A parabolic microphone is a microphone that uses a parabolic reflector to collect and focus sound waves onto a transducer, in much the same way that a parabolic antenna (e.g. satellite dish) does with radio waves. Though they lack high fidelity ...
s, a parabolic reflector is used to focus sound onto a microphone, giving it highly directional performance.
Paraboloids are also observed in the surface of a liquid confined to a container and rotated around the central axis. In this case, the centrifugal force causes the liquid to climb the walls of the container, forming a parabolic surface. This is the principle behind the liquid-mirror telescope.
Aircraft used to create a Weightlessness, weightless state for purposes of experimentation, such as NASA's "Vomit Comet", follow a vertically parabolic trajectory for brief periods in order to trace the course of an object in free fall, which produces the same effect as zero gravity for most purposes.
Gallery
File:Bouncing ball strobe edit.jpg, A bouncing ball captured with a stroboscopic flash at 25 images per second. The ball becomes significantly non-spherical after each bounce, especially after the first. That, along with spin and air resistance, causes the curve swept out to deviate slightly from the expected perfect parabola.
File:ParabolicWaterTrajectory.jpg, Parabolic trajectories of water in a fountain.
File:Comet Kohoutek orbit p391.svg, The path (in red) of Comet Kohoutek as it passed through the inner Solar system, showing its nearly parabolic shape. The blue orbit is the Earth's.
File:Laxmanjhula.jpg, The supporting cables of suspension bridges follow a curve that is intermediate between a parabola and a catenary.
File:Rainbow Bridge(2).jpg, The Rainbow Bridge (Niagara Falls), Rainbow Bridge across the Niagara River, connecting Canada (left) to the United States (right). The parabolic arch is in compression and carries the weight of the road.
File:Celler de Sant Cugat lateral.JPG, Parabolic arches used in architecture
File:Parabola shape in rotating layers of fluid.jpg, Parabolic shape formed by a liquid surface under rotation. Two liquids of different densities completely fill a narrow space between two sheets of transparent plastic. The gap between the sheets is closed at the bottom, sides and top. The whole assembly is rotating around a vertical axis passing through the centre. (See Rotating furnace)
File:ALSOL.jpg, Solar cooker with parabolic reflector
File:Antenna 03.JPG, Parabolic antenna
File:ParabolicMicrophone.jpg, Parabolic microphone with optically transparent plastic reflector used at an American college football game.
File:Solar Array.jpg, Array of parabolic troughs to collect solar energy
File:Ed d21m.jpg, Thomas Edison, Edison's searchlight, mounted on a cart. The light had a parabolic reflector.
File:Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity NASA.jpg, Physicist Stephen Hawking in an aircraft flying a parabolic trajectory to simulate zero gravity
See also
* Degenerate conic
* Dome#Paraboloid dome, Parabolic dome
* Parabolic partial differential equation
* Quadratic equation
* Quadratic function
* Universal parabolic constant
Footnotes
References
Further reading
*
External links
*
* {{MathWorld, title=Parabola, urlname=Parabola
Interactive parabola-drag focus, see axis of symmetry, directrix, standard and vertex forms
Archimedes Triangle and Squaring of Parabola
at cut-the-knot
Two Tangents to Parabola
at cut-the-knot
Parabola As Envelope of Straight Lines
at cut-the-knot
Parabolic Mirror
at cut-the-knot
Three Parabola Tangents
at cut-the-knot
Focal Properties of Parabola
at cut-the-knot
Parabola As Envelope II
at cut-the-knot
The similarity of parabola
a
interactive dynamic geometry sketch.
Frans van Schooten: ''Mathematische Oeffeningen'', 1659
Parabolas,
Conic sections
Algebraic curves