Rotation of Axes PDF
Rotation of Axes PDF
Rotation of Axes PDF
Rotation of Axes
Ax2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0
represented a conic section, which might possibly be degenerate. We saw in Section 5.2
that the graph of the quadratic equation
Ax2 + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0
y y
y y
y)
P(x, y) P(x, y)
P(x, y) P(x,
r x r x
B f B
u u
A x A x
(a) (b)
Figure 1
2 CHAPTER 5 Conic Sections, Polar Coordinates, and Parametric Equations
First introduce a new pair of variables r and to represent, respectively, the distance
from P to the origin and the angle formed by the x-axis and the line connecting the origin
to P , as shown in Figure 1(b).
From the right triangle OBP shown in Figure 2(a) we see that
x
= r cos and y = r sin ,
and from the right triangle OAP shown in Figure 2(b) we see that
y)
P(x, P(x, y)
r B
r
y
f
x
f1u
O O x A
(a) (b)
Figure 2
Using the fundamental trigonometric identities for the sum of the sine and the cosine
we have
x = r cos( + ) = r cos cos r sin sin
and
y = r sin( + ) = r cos sin + r sin cos .
Since x
= r cos and y = r sin , we have the following result. The second pair of equations
is derived by solving for x and y in the first pair.
Rotation of Axes 3
x=x
cos y sin and y=x
sin + y cos .
and
x
= x cos + y sin and y = x sin + y cos .
Figure 3
x=x
cos y sin and y=x
sin + y cos ,
and substitute for x and y in the original equation. This gives us the new equation in x
and y:
x cos y sin )2 + B(
A( x cos y sin )( x sin + y cos )2
x sin + y cos ) + C(
+ D(
x cos y sin ) + E(
x sin + y cos ) + F = 0.
+x
(D cos + E sin ) + y(D sin + E cos ) + F = 0.
Rotation of Axes 5
To eliminate the x
y-term from this equation, choose so that the coefficient of this term
is zero, that is, so that
2A cos sin + B (cos )2 (sin )2 + 2C sin cos = 0.
and
(cos )2 (sin )2 AC
= .
2 cos sin B
Using the double angle formulas for sine and cosine gives
cos 2 AC AC
= , or cot 2 = .
sin 2 B B
Solution: To eliminate the xy-term we first rotate the coordinate axes through
the angle where
AC 47 3
cot 2 = = =
B 4 4
From the triangle in Figure 4, we see that
3
cos 2 = .
5
6 CHAPTER 5 Conic Sections, Polar Coordinates, and Parametric Equations
cot 2u 5 !
cos 2u 5 E
5
4
2u
Figure 4
4x2 4xy + 7y 2 = 24
is consequently the graph of an ellipse that has been rotated through an angle
5
= arcsin 5 26 , as shown in Figure 5.
Rotation of Axes 7
y
y
4
u 5 arcsin(5/5)
x
24 4 x
4x2 2 4xy 1 7y2 5 24
24
Figure 5
There is an easily applied formula that can be used to determine which conic will
be produced once the rotation has been performed. Suppose that a rotation of the
coordinate axes changes the equation
Ax2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0
It is not hard to show, although it is algebraically tedious, that the coefficients of these
two equations satisfy
B 2 4AC = B
2 4AC.
B 2 4AC = 4AC.
However, except for the degenerate cases we know that the new equation
x2 + C y2 + D
A x + E
y + F = 0
will be:
i) An ellipse if AC > 0;
ii) A hyperbola if AC < 0;
iii) A parabola if AC = 0.
Applying this result to the original equation gives the following.
8 CHAPTER 5 Conic Sections, Polar Coordinates, and Parametric Equations
Ax2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0
will be:
i) An ellipse if B 2 4AC = 4AC < 0;
ii) A hyperbola if B 2 4AC = 4AC > 0;
iii) A parabola if B 2 4AC = AC = 0.
The beauty of this result is that we do not need to know the angle that produces the
elimination of the xy-terms. We only need to know that such an angle exists, and we have
already established this fact.
If we apply the result to the examples in this section we see that:
Example 1. The equation xy = 1 has