Cardioid
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In geometry, the cardioid is an epicycloid with one cusp. That is, a cardioid is a curve that can be produced as the path (or locus) of a point on the circumference of a circle as that circle rolls around another fixed circle with the same radius.
The cardioid is also a special type of limaçon: it is the limaçon with one cusp. The cusp is formed when the ratio of a to b in the equation is equal to one.
The name comes from the heart shape of the curve (Greek kardioeides = kardia:heart + eidos:shape). Compared to the heart symbol (♥), though, a cardioid only has one sharp point (or cusp). It is rather shaped more like the outline of the cross section of a plum.
The cardioid is an inverse transform of a parabola.
The large central figure in the Mandelbrot set is a cardioid.
Caustics can take the shape of cardioids. The caustic seen at the bottom of a coffee cup, for instance, may be a cardioid. The specific curve depends on the angle the light source makes relative to the bottom of the cup. The shape can also be a nephroid, which looks quite similar.
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[edit] Equations
Since the cardioid is an epicycloid with one cusp, it has parametric equations
where r is the radius of the circles which generate the curve, and the fixed circle is centered at the origin. The cusp is at (r,0).
The polar equation
yields a cardiod with the same shape. It is the same curve as the cardioid given above, shifted to the left r units, so the cusp is at the origin.
For a proof, see cardioid proofs.
[edit] Graphs
- Four graphs of cardioids oriented in the four cardinal directions, with their respective polar equations.
[edit] Area
The area of a cardioid with polar equation
- ρ(θ) = a(1 − cosθ)
is
- .
See proof.
[edit] See also
- Wittgenstein's rod
- microphone - for a discussion of cardioid microphones
[edit] References
- Hearty Munching on Cardioids at cut-the-knot
- Xah Lee, Cardioid (1998) (This site provides a number of alternative constructions).
- Jan Wassenaar, Cardioid, (2005)