studentcheese
Member
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2008
- Messages
- 628
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2010
OMG this is so embarrassing. Anyways, I seem to be struggling with two parabola questions:
1) the tangent at P(2ap,ap^2) on the parabola x^2=4ay cuts the y axis at T. M is a point on PT that divides PT internally in the ratio 2:1. Show that the cartesian equation of the locus of M is a parabola whose vertex is the origin. What is the focal length of the parabola?
gradient at P... y = x^2/4a = dy/dx = x/2a
gradient of P = p
equation of p.....
p = (y-ap^2)/(x-2ap)
px - 2ap^2 = y - ap^2
px - ap^2 = y
point T.....
when x = 0, y = -ap^2
T = (0, -ap^2)
okay so how do I do I find out the coordinates of M? :mad1:
2) A and B are two points on the parabola x^2 = 4ay, with parameters p, p - 1, respectively. At and Bt are tangents. Show that the locus of T is x^2 = 4a(y+a/4).
I have no idea what this question is trying to get.
Thanks in advance
1) the tangent at P(2ap,ap^2) on the parabola x^2=4ay cuts the y axis at T. M is a point on PT that divides PT internally in the ratio 2:1. Show that the cartesian equation of the locus of M is a parabola whose vertex is the origin. What is the focal length of the parabola?
gradient at P... y = x^2/4a = dy/dx = x/2a
gradient of P = p
equation of p.....
p = (y-ap^2)/(x-2ap)
px - 2ap^2 = y - ap^2
px - ap^2 = y
point T.....
when x = 0, y = -ap^2
T = (0, -ap^2)
okay so how do I do I find out the coordinates of M? :mad1:
2) A and B are two points on the parabola x^2 = 4ay, with parameters p, p - 1, respectively. At and Bt are tangents. Show that the locus of T is x^2 = 4a(y+a/4).
I have no idea what this question is trying to get.
Thanks in advance