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A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

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122 CONIC SECTIONS<br />

chords drawn parallel to the tangents respectively, the rectangles<br />

contained by the segments <strong>of</strong> the chords respectively<br />

are to one another as the squares <strong>of</strong> the parallel tangents<br />

the by no means easy proposition that, if in a parabola the<br />

diameter through P bisects the chord QQ' in V, and QD is<br />

drawn perpendicular to PV, then<br />

where pa is the parameter <strong>of</strong> the principal ordinates and p is<br />

the parameter <strong>of</strong> the ordinates to the diameter PV.<br />

Conic sections in Archimedes.<br />

But we must equally regard Euclid's Conies as the source<br />

from which Archimedes took most <strong>of</strong> the other ordinary<br />

properties <strong>of</strong> conies which he assumes without pro<strong>of</strong>. Before<br />

summarizing these it will be convenient to refer to Archimedes's<br />

terminology. We have seen that the axes <strong>of</strong> an<br />

ellipse<br />

are not called axes but diameters, greater and lesser<br />

the axis <strong>of</strong> a parabola is likewise its diameter and the other<br />

diameters are ' lines parallel to the diameter ', although in<br />

a segment <strong>of</strong> a parabola the diameter bisecting the base is<br />

the ' diameter ' <strong>of</strong> the segment. The two ' diameters ' (axes)<br />

<strong>of</strong> an ellipse are conjugate. In the case <strong>of</strong> the hyperbola the<br />

'<br />

diameter ' (axis) is the portion <strong>of</strong> it within the (single- branch)<br />

hyperbola ; the centre is not called the ' centre ', but the point<br />

in which the nearest '<br />

lines to the section <strong>of</strong> an obtuse-angled<br />

cone' (the asymptotes) meet; the half <strong>of</strong> the axis (CA) is<br />

'<br />

the line adjacent to the axis ' (<strong>of</strong> the hyperboloid <strong>of</strong> revolution<br />

obtained by making the hyperbola revolve about its 'diameter'),<br />

and A'A is double <strong>of</strong> this line. Similarly GP is the line<br />

'<br />

adjacent to the axis ' <strong>of</strong> a segment <strong>of</strong> the hyperboloid, and<br />

P'P double <strong>of</strong> this line. It is clear that Archimedes did not<br />

yet treat the two branches <strong>of</strong> a hyperbola as forming one<br />

curve ; this was reserved for Apollonius.<br />

The main properties <strong>of</strong> conies assumed by Archimedes in<br />

addition to those above mentioned may be summarized thus.<br />

Central<br />

Conies.<br />

1. The property <strong>of</strong> the ordinates to any diameter PP\<br />

QV 2 :PV.P / V = Q'V' 2 :PV'.P'V.

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