11.2 The Ellipse.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
10.1 Parabolas.
Advertisements

Ellipse An ellipse is the set of points in a plane for which the sum of the distances from two fixed points is a given constant. The two fixed points.
Section 11.6 – Conic Sections
10.3 Ellipses JMerrill, General Second Degree Equation Ax 2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0.
Ellipses (page 7) General form is Ax 2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0 where A ≠ C and A and C are same sign.
Section 9.1 The Ellipse.
Conic Sections Parabola Ellipse Hyperbola
11.5 Translation of Axes & the General Form. So far our conic sections in general form have looked like this: Ax 2 + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0 But there.
11.1 Ellipses Objectives: Define an ellipse.
Ellipses Unit 7.2. Description Locus of points in a plane such that the sum of the distances from two fixed points, called foci is constant. P Q d 1 +
9.1.1 – Conic Sections; The Ellipse
MATHPOWER TM 12, WESTERN EDITION Chapter 3 Conics.
Unit #4 Conics. An ellipse is the set of all points in a plane whose distances from two fixed points in the plane, the foci, is constant. Major Axis Minor.
Conic Sections The Ellipse Part A.
Section 11.7 – Conics in Polar Coordinates If e 1, the conic is a hyperbola. The ratio of the distance from a fixed point (focus) to a point on the conic.
Conics A conic section is a graph that results from the intersection of a plane and a double cone.
Chapter 10.5 Conic Sections. Def: The equation of a conic section is given by: Ax 2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0 Where: A, B, C, D, E and F are not.
Conics can be formed by the intersection
Section 7.3 – The Ellipse Ellipse – a set of points in a plane whose distances from two fixed points is a constant.
Ax 2 + Bxy + Cy 2 + Dx + Ey + F=0 General Equation of a Conic Section:
Algebra II Honors Problem of the Day Homework: p , 9, 13, 15, odds and worksheet Paper folding activity is the problem of the day.
Sullivan Algebra and Trigonometry: Section 10.3 The Ellipse Objectives of this Section Find the Equation of an Ellipse Graph Ellipses Discuss the Equation.
Ellipses Part 1 Circle/Ellipse Quiz: March 9 Midterm: March 11.
Section 8.3 Ellipses Parabola Hyperbola Circle Ellipse.
Ellipses On to Sec. 8.2a….
SECTION: 10-2 ELLIPSES WARM-UP
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved
Conic Sections The Parabola. Introduction Consider a ___________ being intersected with a __________.
9.2. Ellipses Definition of Ellipse
10.3 The Ellipse.
The Ellipse.
Warm up Write the standard form of the equation: Then find the radius and the coordinates of the center. Graph the equation.
Ellipse Notes. What is an ellipse? The set of all points, P, in a plane such that the sum of the distances between P and the foci is constant.
11.3 The Hyperbola. Hyperbola: the set of all points P in a plane such that the absolute value of the difference of the distances from two fixed points.
Warm-Up Write the standard equation of the circle with the given radius and center. 1) 9; (0,0) 2) 1; (0,5) 3) 4; (-8,-1) 4) 5; (4,2)
Conic Sections There are 4 types of Conics which we will investigate: 1.Circles 2.Parabolas 3.Ellipses 4.Hyperbolas.
Conic Sections The Ellipse Part A. Ellipse Another conic section formed by a plane intersecting a cone Ellipse formed when.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. The Ellipse and the Circle Section 7.2 The Conic Sections.
10.3 Ellipses Foci Major Axis / Minor Axis Vertices / Co- Vertices Eccentricity.
Conics Ellipses. Ellipse Definition: the set of all points in a plane whose distances from two fixed points in the plane have a constant sum. The fixed.
8.3 Ellipses May 15, Ellipse Definition: Is the set of all points such that the sum of the distances between the point and the foci is the same.
Distance The distance between any two points P and Q is written PQ. Find PQ if P is (9, 1) and Q is (2, -1)
Making graphs and using equations of ellipses. An ellipse is the set of all points P in a plane such that the sum of the distance from P to 2 fixed points.
Ellipses Objectives: Write the standard equation for an ellipse given sufficient information Given an equation of an ellipse, graph it and label the center,
10.2 Ellipses. Ellipse – a set of points P in a plane such that the sum of the distances from P to 2 fixed points (F 1 and F 2 ) is a given constant K.
WARM UP 1.Find the equation of the circle with center at (9, 2) and radius 2. 2.Find the center and radius of the circle 3.Find the center and radius of.
Splash Screen.
Chapter 6 Analytic Geometry. Chapter 6 Analytic Geometry.
10.2 Ellipses.
Ellipses Date: ____________.
Graph and Write Equations of Elllipses
Chapter 3 Conics 3.4 The Ellipse MATHPOWERTM 12, WESTERN EDITION
Ellipses 5.3 (Chapter 10 – Conics). Ellipses 5.3 (Chapter 10 – Conics)
MATH 1330 Section 8.2b.
Section 10.2 – The Ellipse Ellipse – a set of points in a plane whose distances from two fixed points is a constant.
Splash Screen.
Ellipses Ellipse: set of all points in a plane such that the sum of the distances from two given points in a plane, called the foci, is constant. Sum.
Review Circles: 1. Find the center and radius of the circle.
Chapter 10 Conic Sections
Ellipses Objectives: Write the standard equation for an ellipse given sufficient information Given an equation of an ellipse, graph it and label the center,
Sullivan Algebra and Trigonometry: Section 11.3
Conic Sections The Ellipse Part A.
Section 10.2 Ellipses.
Chapter 3 Conics 3.4 The Ellipse MATHPOWERTM 12, WESTERN EDITION
Ellipses.
4 minutes Warm-Up Write the standard equation of the circle with the given radius and center. 1) 9; (0,0) 2) 1; (0,5) 3) 4; (-8,-1) 4) 5; (4,2)
L10-4 Obj: Students will find equations for ellipses and graph ellipses. Ellipse Definition: Each fixed point F is a focus of an ellipse (plural: foci).
Warm up: Write an equation for the circle that has center (5, 0), and radius 6 units. A. x2 + (y – 5)2 = 36 B. x2 – (y – 5)2 = 36 C. (x – 5)2 + y2 = 36.
Ellipse.
Goal: Find the equation, vertices, and foci of an ellipse.
Presentation transcript:

11.2 The Ellipse

Ellipse: the set of all points P in a plane such that the sum of the distances from P to two fixed points is a constant. (focus  pl. foci) Standard Equation (center at (0, 0)) Foci on x-axis Foci on y-axis Major axis = 2a Minor axis = 2b (0, a) (0, b) minor axis major (a, 0) (–b, 0) (b, 0) (–a, 0) major axis minor (0, –b) (0, –a) Foci: c2 = a2 – b2 Foci: (±c, 0) Foci: (0, ±c)

Ex 1) Determine the endpoints of the major and minor axes and the foci of the ellipse 25x2 + 9y2 = 225 and graph. Standard form: c2 = 25 – 9 c2 = 16 c = 4 on y-axis (0, ±4) b2 a2 (±3, 0) (0, ±5) The shape of an ellipse is measured by a constant called the eccentricity. For an ellipse, e is equal to the ratio of the distance between the center and a focus to the distance between the center and a corresponding vertex. 0 < e < 1 iff the conic is an ellipse

Ex 2) The dwarf planet Pluto has an elliptical orbit with the sun at one focus. The minimum & maximum distances of Pluto from the sun occur at the vertices of the ellipse. The minimum distance is 2.7 billion miles and the maximum distance is 4.5 billion miles. Find the eccentricity of Pluto’s orbit. major axis = 2a 2a = max dist + min distance 2a = 4.5 + 2.7 = 7.2 a = 3.6 c = 3.6 – 2.7 = 0.9 4.5 2.7

What if center is not the origin? Standard form of ellipse with center (h, k) & with axes parallel to coordinate axis OR Ex 3) Determine an equation of an ellipse in standard form with foci (8, 3) and (–4, 3) if length of major axis is 14. Graph it. (Hint: graph as you go) center halfway between foci ½(–4 + 8) = 2 C(2, 3) & c = 6 major axis = 14  a = 7 on “x-axis” c2 = a2 – b2 36 = 49 – b2 b2 = 13 b ≈ 3.6

The general form of an equation of an ellipse with axes parallel to the coordinate axes is Ax2 + Cy2 + Dx + Ey + F = 0. You can change from general form to standard form by … completing the square!  Ex 4) Determine the center, the endpoints of the major & minor axes, the foci, and the eccentricity of x2 + 4y2 – 6x – 16y – 11 = 0. Graph it. (x2 – 6x + 9 ) + 4(y2 – 4y + 4 ) = 11 + 9 + 16 (x – 3)2 + 4(y – 2)2 = 36 36 36 a2 b2 Center (3, 2)

6 Major axis: (3 ± a, 2)  (9, 2) and (–3, 2) Minor axis: (3, 2 ± b)  (3, 5) and (3, –1) c2 = 36 – 9 c2 = 27 3 a2 b2 Center (3, 2)

Homework #1102 Pg 546 #1–9 odd, 14, 16, 19, 23, 29, 30, 33, 37, 45