Summary
In geometry, a hypocycloid is a special plane curve generated by the trace of a fixed point on a small circle that rolls within a larger circle. As the radius of the larger circle is increased, the hypocycloid becomes more like the cycloid created by rolling a circle on a line. The 2-cusped hypocycloid called Tusi couple was first described by the 13th-century Persian astronomer and mathematician Nasir al-Din al-Tusi in Tahrir al-Majisti (Commentary on the Almagest). German painter and German Renaissance theorist Albrecht Dürer described epitrochoids in 1525, and later Roemer and Bernoulli concentrated on some specific hypocycloids, like the astroid, in 1674 and 1691, respectively. If the smaller circle has radius r, and the larger circle has radius R = kr, then the parametric equations for the curve can be given by either: or: If k is an integer, then the curve is closed, and has k cusps (i.e., sharp corners, where the curve is not differentiable). Specially for k = 2 the curve is a straight line and the circles are called Cardano circles. Girolamo Cardano was the first to describe these hypocycloids and their applications to high-speed printing. If k is a rational number, say k = p/q expressed in simplest terms, then the curve has p cusps. If k is an irrational number, then the curve never closes, and fills the space between the larger circle and a circle of radius R − 2r. Each hypocycloid (for any value of r) is a brachistochrone for the gravitational potential inside a homogeneous sphere of radius R. The area enclosed by a hypocycloid is given by: The arc length of a hypocycloid is given by: Image:Hypocycloid-3.svg| k=3 → a [[deltoid curve|deltoid]] Image:Hypocycloid-4.svg| k=4 → an [[astroid]] Image:Hypocycloid-5.svg| k=5 → a pentoid Image:Hypocycloid-6.svg| k=6 → an exoid Image:Hypocycloid-2-1.svg| k=2.1 = 21/10 Image:Hypocycloid-3-8.svg| k=3.8 = 19/5 Image:Hypocycloid-5-5.svg| k=5.5 = 11/2 Image:Hypocycloid-7-2.svg| k=7.2 = 36/5 The hypocycloid is a special kind of hypotrochoid, which is a particular kind of roulette.
About this result
This page is automatically generated and may contain information that is not correct, complete, up-to-date, or relevant to your search query. The same applies to every other page on this website. Please make sure to verify the information with EPFL's official sources.