Quadric
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This is an article about quadric in mathematics, to see the computing company go to Quadrics.
In mathematics a quadric, or quadric surface, is any D-dimensional hypersurface defined as the locus of zeros of a quadratic polynomial. In coordinates [\], the general quadric is defined by the algebraic equation [link], Quadrics in Geometry Formulas and Facts by Silvio Levy, excerpted from 30th Edition of the CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulas (CRC Press).
- [\sum_^D Q_ x_i x_j + \sum_^D P_i x_i + R = 0]
The normalized equation for a three-dimensional (D=3) quadric centred at the origin (0,0,0) is:
- [\pm \pm \pm =1]
| ellipsoid | [ + + = 1 \,] |
| spheroid (special case of ellipsoid) | [ + + = 1 \,] |
| sphere (special case of spheroid) | [ + + = 1 \,] |
| elliptic paraboloid | [ + - z = 0 \,] |
| circular paraboloid | [ + - z = 0 \,] |
| hyperbolic paraboloid | [ - - z = 0 \,] |
| hyperboloid of one sheet | [ + - = 1 \,] |
| hyperboloid of two sheets | [ - - = 1 \,] |
| cone | [ + - = 0 \,] |
| elliptic cylinder | [ + = 1 \,] |
| circular cylinder | [ + = 1 \,] |
| hyperbolic cylinder | [ - = 1 \,] |
| parabolic cylinder | [x^2 + 2y = 0 \,] |
In real projective space, the ellipsoid, the elliptic paraboloid and the hyperboloid of two sheets are equivalent to each other up to a projective transformation; the two hyperbolic paraboloids are not different from each other (these are ruled surfaces); the cone and the cylinder are not different from each other (these are "degenerate" quadrics, since their Gaussian curvature is zero).
In complex projective space all of the nondegenerate quadrics become indistinguishable from each other.
References
- , [Quadric] at MathWorld.
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