victorling
Member
i have tried searching for questions
but almost all have been answered...
but almost all have been answered...
okOriginally posted by Wohzazz
Ok, let's test your skill.
The tangent at a point P of the ellipse x*2/a*2 + y*2/b*2 cuts the x axis at T and the perpendicular PN is drawn to the x axis. Prove that OT.ON=a*2
if you could, take some 'accepted shortcuts'
Originally posted by victorling
ok
no problem!Originally posted by Wohzazz
Damn that was easy. Heh, guess i'm crap. I didn't convert tan@ to sin@/cos@ and just left it. I knew it was easy. Thanks victorling.
Just HAD to do it differently didn't you?Originally posted by spice girl
u can solve the case for the circle x^2 + y^2 = a^2 using similar triangles, and then squish it into an ellipse. because you're not changing the x-co-ords of any point during this transformation, the value OT*ON is still preserved.
yep, and innovatingly as well.Originally posted by KeypadSDM
Just HAD to do it differently didn't you?
i don't really get what you saying, can you lay it out more thoroughly, if it is shorter, it will help heapsOriginally posted by spice girl
u can solve the case for the circle x^2 + y^2 = a^2 using similar triangles, and then squish it into an ellipse. because you're not changing the x-co-ords of any point during this transformation, the value OT*ON is still preserved.
no worry, that 's an alternative solutionOriginally posted by Wohzazz
i don't really get what you saying, can you lay it out more thoroughly, if it is shorter, it will help heaps
........else i'll have to do it the long 'standard' way
true...i'm wondering if u have your own method as well?Originally posted by turtle_2468
Umm, spice girl is spicing it up
Probably the other one is easier to understand and apply generally... unless you have an affinity for geometric transformations, ha ha...
I'm wondering how drbuchernan's going to relate it back to the assumption that the Reinmann hypothesis is correct.Originally posted by freaking_out
true...i'm wondering if u have your own method as well?
was the question answered? what's the alternative method?Originally posted by victorling
no worry, that 's an alternative solution
the most important thing now is that u know how to approach it
Originally posted by turtle_2468
Probably the best alternative method is spice girl's... Basically, "stretch" the plane in the direction of the y-axis. As you do that, the x-values don't change, so OT and ON remain constant. As a result, as the minor axis of the ellipse lies on the y-axis, you can "stretch" the plane such that the ellipse becomes a circle, making things much much nicer.
I'm sure you could coord bash it as well
i'll stick with the traditional methodOriginally posted by spice girl
well Wohzazz asked for 'accepted shortcuts' so...
anyway, my answer was just a shortcut that u can only do with 5% of conics questions, and its unlikely u can make a repeat performance of it in the HSC