Most of us
know area formulas for basic geometrical objects, such as circles, squares,
rectangles, and triangles. (The area of
a circle is A = πr2, the area of a square is A = s2, the
area of a rectangle is A = lw, and the area of a triangle is A = ½bh.) Others of us may even remember learning area
formulas of other geometrical objects in high school geometry, such as
parallelograms, trapezoids, and equilateral triangles. (The area of a parallelogram is A = bh, the
area of a trapezoid is ½(b1 + b2)h, and the area of an
equilateral triangle is ¼√3s2.)
Other than
the circle, the area of conics are neglected in most geometry textbooks, even
though the Cartesian equation for each conic are included in most algebra
textbooks. The area of a parabola is A = 2/3bh (where b
and h are the base and height of the rectangle that contains it).
The area of an ellipse is A = πab
(where a and b are the major and minor axes of the ellipse).
The area of a hyperbola is A = ab(h+a/a√((
h+a/a)2 – 1) – ln|h+a/a + √((
h+a/a)2 – 1)|) (where a and b are the axes of
the hyperbola and h is the height).
The area
formulas for the parabola and ellipse are relatively simple, the equation for
the hyperbola is not.
To prove the
area of a parabola, we can use integration.
The Cartesian equation for a parabola with its vertex at the origin is y
= ax2, which means another point on the parabola would be (b, ab2).
The area of
a rectangle with opposite vertices on the origin and (b, ab2) is A =
b∙ab2 = ab3. The
area of the parabola inside this rectangle is A = ∫0b ab2
– ax2 dx = ab2x – 1/3ax3]
0b = ab2b – 1/3ab3
= ab3 – 1/3ab3 = 2/3ab3. (The left half of the parabola would be the
same by symmetry.) Therefore, the area
of the parabola is 2/3 of the area of the rectangle that
contains it, or A = 2/3bh.
To prove the
area of an ellipse, we can compare its Cartesian equation to the Cartesian
equation of a circle. The Cartesian
equation for an ellipse centered at the origin where a and b are the major and
minor axes is x^2/a^2 + y^2/b^2 =
1, which rearranged is y = b/a√(a2 – x2),
and the Cartesian equation for a circle centered at the origin where a is a
radius is x2 + y2 = a2, which rearranged is y
= √(a2 – x2), so the difference in heights is a factor of
b/a.
So if the
area of a circle is A = πr2, or in this case A = πa2, the
area of an ellipse must be A = b/aπa2 = πab. (Technically speaking, the area of an ellipse
is 4∫0a b/a√(a2 – x2)dx
= b/a 4∫0a √(a2 – x2)dx
= b/aπa2 = πab.)
To prove the
area of the hyperbola, we can use integration once again. The Cartesian equation for a horizontal
hyperbola centered at the origin where a and b are the major and minor axes is x^2/a^2
– y^2/b^2 = 1, which rearranged is y = b/a√(x2
– a2).
The area is
then A = 2∫ah+a b/a√(x2
– a2)dx. Using a right
triangle with legs a and √(x2 – a2) and hypotenuse x, tan
q = √(x^2 – a^2)/a
or √(x2 – a2) = a tan q,
and sec q = x/a
or x = a sec q,
which means dx = a sec q
tan q dq.
Using
substitution, A = 2∫sec-1(a)sec-1(h+a) b/a
a tan q a sec q tan q dq = 2ab∫0sec-1((h+a)/a)
tan2 q sec q dq = 2ab∫0sec-1((h+a)/a)
(sec2 q –
1)sec q dq = 2ab∫0sec-1((h+a)/a)
sec3 q –
sec q dq.
Integrating results in 2ab[½ sec q
tan q + ½ ln|sec q + tan q| – ln|sec q + tan q|] 0sec-1((h+a)/a)
= ab[sec q
tan q – ln|sec q + tan q|] 0sec-1((h+a)/a). Since sec(sec-1(x)) = x and tan(sec-1(x))
= √(x2 – 1), A = ab(h+a/a√(( h+a/a)2
– 1) – ln|h+a/a + √(( h+a/a)2
– 1)|).
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