Superellipse

Superellipse

The superellipse (or Lamé curve) is the geometric figure defined in the Cartesian coordinate system as the set of all points ("x", "y") with:left|frac{x}{a} ight|^n! + left|frac{y}{b} ight|^n! = 1 where "n" > 0 and "a" and "b" are the semi-major and semi-minor axes of the oval shape. The case "n" = 2 yields an ordinary ellipse; increasing "n" beyond 2 yields the hyperellipses, which increasingly resemble rectangles; decreasing "n" below 2 yields hypoellipses which develop pointy corners in the "x" and "y" directions and increasingly resemble crosses. The case "n" = 1 yields a rhombus; the lengths of the diagonals are 2a and 2b. The case "n" = 1/2 is a star each of whose sides is an arc of a parabola. A superellipse with "a" = "b" is also the unit circle in R2 when distance is defined by the "n"-norm.

Effects of "n"

When "n" is a nonzero rational number frac{p}{q} (in lowest terms), then the superellipse is a plane algebraic curve. For positive "n" the order is "pq"; for negative "n" the order is 2"pq". In particular, when "a" and "b" are both one and "n" is an even integer, then it is a Fermat curve of degree "n". In that case it is nonsingular, but in general it will be singular. If the numerator is not even, then the curve is pasted together from portions of the same algebraic curve in different orientations.For example, if "x"4/3 + "y"4/3=1, then the curve is an algebraic curve of degree twelve and genus three, given by the implicit equation:(x^4+y^4)^3-3(x^4-3x^2y^2+y^4)(x^4+3x^2y^2+y^4)+3(x^4+y^4)-1=0 , ,!or by the parametric equations:left.egin{align} xleft( heta ight) &= plusmn acos^{frac{2}{n heta \ yleft( heta ight) &= plusmn bsin^{frac{2}{n hetaend{align} ight} qquad 0 le heta < frac{pi}{2} or:egin{align} xleft( heta ight) &= ^{frac{2}{n cdot a sgn(cos heta) \ yleft( heta ight) &= ^{frac{2}{m cdot b sgn(sin heta)end{align}

History

The general Cartesian notation of the form comes from the French mathematician Gabriel Lamé (1795&ndash;1870) who generalized the equation for the ellipse.

Though he is often credited with its invention, the Danish poet and scientist Piet Hein (1905–1996) did not discover the super-ellipse. In 1959, city planners in Stockholm, Sweden announced a design challenge for a roundabout in their city square Sergels Torg. Piet Hein's winning proposal was based on a superellipse with "n"=2.5 and "a"/"b" = 6/5 cite book | last=Gardner | first=Martin | author-link=Martin Gardner | chapter=Piet Hein’s Superellipse | year=1977 | title=Mathematical Carnival. A New Round-Up of Tantalizers and Puzzles from Scientific American | location=New York | publisher=Vintage Press | pages=240–254 | isbn=978-0-394-72349-5] . As he explained it:

:"Man is the animal that draws lines which he himself then stumbles over. In the whole pattern of civilization there have been two tendencies, one toward straight lines and rectangular patterns and one toward circular lines. There are reasons, mechanical and psychological, for both tendencies. Things made with straight lines fit well together and save space. And we can move easily &mdash; physically or mentally &mdash; around things made with round lines. But we are in a straitjacket, having to accept one or the other, when often some intermediate form would be better. To draw something freehand &mdash; such as the patchwork traffic circle they tried in Stockholm &mdash; will not do. It isn't fixed, isn't definite like a circle or square. You don't know what it is. It isn't esthetically satisfying. The super-ellipse solved the problem. It is neither round nor rectangular, but in between. Yet it is fixed, it is definite &mdash; it has a unity."

Sergels Torg was completed in 1967. Meanwhile Piet Hein went on to use the superellipse in other artifacts, such as beds, dishes, tables, etc. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1053884 "The Superellipse"] , in "The Guide to Life, The Universe and Everything" by BBC (27th June 2003)] . By rotating a superellipse around the longest axis, he created the superegg, a solid egg-like shape that could stand upright on a flat surface, and was marketed as a novelty toy.

In 1968, when negotiators in Paris for the Vietnam War could not agree on the shape of the negotiating table, Balinski and Holt suggested a superelliptical table in a letter to the New York Times . The superellipse was used for the shape of the 1968 Azteca Olympic Stadium, in Mexico City.

Hermann Zapf's typeface Melior, published in 1952, uses superellipses for letters such as "o". Many web sites say Zapf actually drew the shapes of Melior by hand without knowing the mathematical concept of the superellipse, and only later did Piet Hein point out to Zapf that his curves were extremely similar to the mathematical construct, but these web sites do not cite any primary source of this account. Thirty years later Donald Knuth built into his Computer Modern type family the ability to choose between true ellipses and superellipses (both approximated by cubic splines).

See also

* Astroid, the superellipse with "n" = fraction|2|3 and "a" = "b"
* Ellipse
* Ellipsoid, a higher-dimensional analogue of an ellipse
* Spheroid, the ellipsoids obtained by rotating an ellipse about its major or minor axis
* Squircle, the superellipse with "n" = 4 and "a" = "b"
* Superformula, a generalization of the superellipse
* Superquadrics

References

* (Ph.D. dissertation using superellipsoids)
*
*
*

External links

* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Superellipse.html Superellipse (MathWorld)]
* [http://www.activeart.de/dim-shops/training/SuperEllipse Lamé's Super Ellipse (Java-Applet)]
* [http://www.activeart.de/dim-shops/training/SuperEllipse3D Super Ellipsoid (Java-Applet)]
* [http://www.geniaal.be Johan Gielis'] and [http://users.skynet.be/bert.beirinckx Bert Beirinckx'] " [http://www.genicap.com Superformula] ".


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