hyperbolic paraboloid
n.
A surface of which all sections parallel to one coordinate plane are hyperbolas and all sections parallel to another coordinate plane are parabolas.
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A surface of which all sections parallel to one coordinate plane are hyperbolas and all sections parallel to another coordinate plane are parabolas.
In mathematics, a paraboloid is a quadric, a type of surface in three dimensions, described by the equation:
(elliptical paraboloid, opens upward),or
(hyperbolic paraboloid, opens up on x-axis and down on
y-axis).There are two kinds of paraboloid: elliptic and hyperbolic. The elliptic paraboloid is shaped like an oval cup and can have a maximum or minimum point. The hyperbolic paraboloid is shaped like a saddle and can have a critical point called a saddle point. It is a doubly ruled surface.
With a = b an elliptic paraboloid is a paraboloid of revolution: a surface obtained by revolving a parabola around its axis. It is the shape of the parabolic reflectors used in mirrors, antenna dishes, and the like; and is also the shape of the surface of a rotating liquid, a principle used in liquid mirror telescopes. It is also called a circular paraboloid.
A point light source at the focal point produces a parallel light beam. This also works the other way around: a parallel beam of light incident on the paraboloid is concentrated at the focal point. This applies also for other waves, hence parabolic antennas.
The hyperbolic paraboloid is a ruled surface: it contains two families of mutually skew lines. The lines in each family are parallel to a common plane, but not to each other.
A daily life example of a hyperbolic paraboloid is the shape of a Pringles potato chip.[citation needed]
The roof of the dining hall at St Dunstan's College in South-east London has the shape of a hyperbolic paraboloid.[1]
The elliptic paraboloid, parametrized simply as


and mean curvature

which are both always positive, have their maximum at the origin, become smaller as a point on the surface moves further away from the origin, and tend asymptotically to zero as the said point moves infinitely away from the origin.
The hyperbolic paraboloid, when parametrized as

has Gaussian curvature

and mean curvature

If the hyperbolic paraboloid

is rotated by an angle of π/4 in the +z direction (according to the right hand rule), the result is the surface

and if
then this
simplifies to
.Finally, letting
, we
see that the hyperbolic paraboloid
.is congruent to the surface

which can be thought of as the geometric representation (a three-dimensional nomograph, as it were) of a multiplication table.
The two paraboloidal
functions

and

are harmonic conjugates, and together form the analytic function

which is the analytic continuation of the
parabolic function

Cherry, Bridget (1983). London 2: South: The Buildings of England. Yale University Press, 418. ISBN 0300096518.
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Did you mean: hyperbolic paraboloid, paraboloid
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paraboloid". Read more |
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