:''For hyperbole, the figure of speech, see
hyperbole.''
In
mathematics, a 'hyperbola' (
Greek literally 'overshooting' or 'excess') is a type of
conic section defined as the intersection between a right circular
conical surface and a
plane which cuts through both halves of the cone.
It may also be defined as the
locus of points where the difference in the
distance to two fixed points (called the
foci) is constant. That fixed difference in distance is two times ''a'' where ''a'' is the distance from the center of the hyperbola to the vertex of the nearest branch of the hyperbola. ''a'' is also known as the semi-major axis of the hyperbola. The foci lie on the transverse axis and their midpoint is called the center.
For a simple geometric proof that the two characterizations above are equivalent to each other, see
Dandelin spheres.
Algebraically, a hyperbola is a curve in the
Cartesian plane defined by
an equation of the form
:
such that
, where all of the coefficients are real, and where more than one solution, defining a pair of points (x, y) on the hyperbola, exists.
Note that the graph of two variables varying inversely on the Cartesian coordinate plane is a hyperbola.
Definitions
The first two were listed above:
★ The intersection between a right circular conical surface and a plane which cuts through both halves of the cone.
★ The
locus of points where the difference in the distance to two fixed points (called the foci) is constant.
★ The locus of points for which the
ratio of the distances to one focus and to a
line (called the directrix) is a
constant larger than 1. This constant is the
eccentricity of the hyperbola.
A hyperbola comprises two disconnected
curves called its 'arms' or 'branches' which separate the foci.
At large distances from the foci the hyperbola begins to approximate two lines, known as
asymptotes. The asymptotes cross at the center of the hyperbola and have slope
for an East-West opening hyperbola or
for a North-South opening hyperbola.
A hyperbola has the property that a
ray originating at one of the foci is
reflected in such a way as to appear to have originated at the other focus. Also, if rays are directed towards one of the foci from the exterior of the hyperbola, they will be reflected towards the other foci.

Conjugate unit rectangular hyperbolas
A special case of the hyperbola is the 'equilateral' or 'rectangular hyperbola', in which the asymptotes intersect at right
angles. The rectangular hyperbola with the coordinate axes as its asymptotes is given by the equation ''xy=c'', where ''c'' is a constant.
Just as the
sine and
cosine functions give a
parametric equation for the
ellipse, so the
hyperbolic sine and
hyperbolic cosine give a parametric equation for the hyperbola.
If on the hyperbola equation one switches ''x'' and ''y'', the
conjugate hyperbola is obtained. A hyperbola and its conjugate have the same asymptotes.
Equations
Cartesian
''East-west opening hyperbola centered at (h,k):''
:
''North-south opening hyperbola centered at (h,k):''
:
The major axis runs through the center of the hyperbola and intersects both arms of the hyperbola at the vertices (bend points) of the arms. The foci lie on the extension of the major axis of the hyperbola.
The minor axis runs through the center of the hyperbola and is perpendicular to the major axis.
In both formulas ''a'' is the
semi-major axis (half the distance between the two arms of the hyperbola measured along the major axis), and b is the
semi-minor axis.
If one forms a rectangle with vertices on the asymptotes and two sides that are tangent to the hyperbola, the length of the sides tangent to the hyperbola are ''2b'' in length while the sides that run parallel to the line between the foci (the major axis) are ''2a'' in length. Note that ''b'' may be larger than ''a''.
If one calculates the distance from any point on the hyperbola to each focus, the absolute value of the difference of those two distances is always ''2a''.
The
eccentricity is given by
:
The foci for an east-west opening hyperbola are given by
:
where c is given by
and for a north-south opening hyperbola are given by
:
again with
For rectangular hyperbolas with the coordinate axes parallel to their asymptotes:
:

A graph of the rectangular hyperbola, .
The simplest example of these are the hyperbolas
:
.
Polar
''East-west opening hyperbola:''
:
''North-south opening hyperbola:''
:
''Northeast-southwest opening hyperbola:''
:
''Northwest-southeast opening hyperbola:''
:
In all formulas the center is at the pole, and ''a'' is the semi-major and semi-minor axis.
Parametric
''East-west opening hyperbola:''
:
''North-south opening hyperbola:''
:
In all formulas (''h'',''k'') is the center of the hyperbola, ''a'' is the semi-major axis, and ''b'' is the semi-minor axis.
See also
★
Ellipse
★
Parabola
★
Circle
★
Dandelin spheres
★
Hyperbolic sector
★
Hyperbolic angle
★
Hyperbolic function
★
Hyperbolic trajectory
★
Hyperbolic structure
★
Hyperboloid
★
Multilateration
★
Conic section
★
Hyperbolic partial differential equation
External links
★
Apollonius' Derivation of the Hyperbola at
Convergence
★
★
★
★
Mathworld - Hyperbola