Conoid
In geometry a conoid is a ruled surface, whose rulings fulfill the additional conditions:
The conoid is a right conoid if its axis is perpendicular to its directrix plane. Hence all rulings are perpendicular to the axis.
Because of any conoid is a Catalan surface and can be represented parametrically by
Any curve with fixed parameter is a ruling, describes the directrix and the vectors are all parallel to the directrix plane. The planarity of the vectors can be represented by
If the directrix is a circle, the conoid is called a circular conoid.
The term conoid was already used by Archimedes in his treatise On Conoids and Spheroides.
Examples
Right circular conoid
The parametric representationSpecial features:
- The intersection with a horizontal plane is an ellipse.
- is an implicit representation. Hence the right circular conoid is a surface of degree 4.
- Kepler's rule gives for a right circular conoid with radius and height the exact volume:.
Parabolic conoid
The parametric representationdescribes a parabolic conoid with the equation. The conoid has a parabola as directrix, the y-axis as axis and a plane parallel to the x-z-plane as directrix plane. It is used by architects as roof surface.
The parabolic conoid has no singular points.
Further examples
- hyperbolic paraboloid
- Plücker conoid
- Whitney Umbrella
- helicoid
Applications