Witch of Agnesi
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In mathematics, the witch of Agnesi, sometimes called the witch of Maria Agnesi (named for Maria Agnesi) is the curve defined as follows.
Starting with a fixed circle, a point O on the circle is chosen. For any other point A on the circle, the secant line OA is drawn. The point M is diametrically opposite O. The line OA intersects the tangent at M at the point N. The line parallel to OM through N, and the line perpendicular to OM through A intersect at P. As the point A is varied, the path of P is the witch.
The curve is asymptotic to the line tangent to the fixed circle through the point O.
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[edit] Equations
Suppose the point O is the origin, and that M is on the positive y-axis. Suppose the radius of the circle is a.
Then the curve has Cartesian equation .
Note that if a=1/2, then this equation becomes the very simple
Parametrically, if is the angle between OM and OA, measured clockwise, then the curve is defined by the equations
Another parametrization, with being the angle between OA and the x-axis, increasing anti-clockwise is
[edit] Properties
The area between the Witch and its asymptote is four times the area of the fixed circle (i.e., 4πa2).
The volume of revolution of the Witch, about its asymptote, is 4π2a3.
The centroid of the curve is at .
[edit] History
The curve was studied by Fermat, Guido Grandi in 1701, and by Maria Agnesi in 1748.
In Italian, this curve is called la versiera di Agnesi which means "the curve of Agnesi". Early on this was read by Cambridge professor John Colson as "l'avversiera di Agnesi", where "avversiera" means "witch", and the mistranslation into English stuck [1][2].
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ "Fermat's Enigma" by Simon Singh
- ^ "A Brief History of The Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics at Cambridge University" — Robert Bruen, Boston College, May 1995
- "The Witch of Agnesi". John H. Lienhard. The Engines of Our Ingenuity. NPR. KUHF-FM Houston. 2002. No. 1741. Transcript.
- Eric W. Weisstein, Witch of Agnesi at MathWorld.
- MacTutor biography of Agnesi.
- Witch of Agnesi by Chris Boucher based on work by Eric W. Weisstein, The Wolfram Demonstrations Project.