Hyperboloid of one sheet | conical surface in between | Hyperboloid of two sheets |
A hyperboloid is a quadric surface, that is, a surface defined as the zero set of a polynomial of degree two in three variables. Among quadric surfaces, a hyperboloid is characterized by not being a conical surface or a cylinder, having a central symmetry, and intersecting many planes into hyperbolas. A hyperboloid has three pairwise perpendicular axes of symmetry, and three pairwise perpendicular planes of symmetry.
Given a hyperboloid, one can choose a Cartesian coordinate system such that the hyperboloid is defined by one of the following equations: or The coordinate axes are axes of symmetry of the hyperboloid and the origin is the center of symmetry of the hyperboloid. In any case, the hyperboloid is asymptotic to the cone of the equations:
One has a hyperboloid of revolution if and only if Otherwise, the axes are uniquely defined (up to the exchange of the x-axis and the y-axis).
There are two kinds of hyperboloids. In the first case ( in the right-hand side of the equation): a one-sheet hyperboloid, also called a hyperbolic hyperboloid. It is a connected set, which has a negative Gaussian curvature at every point. This implies near every point the intersection of the hyperboloid and its tangent plane at the point consists of two branches of curve that have distinct tangents at the point. In the case of the one-sheet hyperboloid, these branches of curves are lines and thus the one-sheet hyperboloid is a doubly ruled surface.
In the second case ( in the right-hand side of the equation): a two-sheet hyperboloid, also called an elliptic hyperboloid. The surface has two connected components and a positive Gaussian curvature at every point. The surface is convex in the sense that the tangent plane at every point intersects the surface only in this point.
One-surface hyperboloid:
Two-surface hyperboloid:
The following parametric representation includes hyperboloids of one sheet, two sheets, and their common boundary cone, each with the -axis as the axis of symmetry:
One can obtain a parametric representation of a hyperboloid with a different coordinate axis as the axis of symmetry by shuffling the position of the term to the appropriate component in the equation above.
The of define the principal directions of the hyperboloid and the of A are the reciprocals of the squares of the semi-axes: , and . The one-sheet hyperboloid has two positive eigenvalues and one negative eigenvalue. The two-sheet hyperboloid has one positive eigenvalue and two negative eigenvalues.
In case the hyperboloid is a surface of revolution and can be generated by rotating one of the two lines or , which are skew to the rotation axis (see picture). This property is called Christopher Wren's theorem.K. Strubecker: Vorlesungen der Darstellenden Geometrie. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1967, p. 218 The more common generation of a one-sheet hyperboloid of revolution is rotating a hyperbola around its semi-minor axis (see picture; rotating the hyperbola around its other axis gives a two-sheet hyperbola of revolution).
A hyperboloid of one sheet is projectively equivalent to a hyperbolic paraboloid.
Remark: A hyperboloid of two sheets is projectively equivalent to a sphere.
As an example, consider the following passage:Thomas Hawkins (2000) Emergence of the Theory of Lie Groups: an essay in the history of mathematics, 1869—1926, §9.3 "The Mathematization of Physics at Göttingen", see page 340, Springer
... the velocity vectors always lie on a surface which Minkowski calls a four-dimensional hyperboloid since, expressed in terms of purely real coordinates , its equation is , analogous to the hyperboloid of three-dimensional space.
However, the term quasi-sphere is also used in this context since the sphere and hyperboloid have some commonality (See below).
Adziogol hyperboloid Lighthouse by Vladimir Shukhov 1911.jpg|The Adziogol Lighthouse, [[Ukraine]], 1911.
Staatsmijn Emma Koeltoren III - Brunssum - 20260911 - RCE.jpg|The first 1916 patented Van Iterson [[cooling tower]] of [[DSM Emma|Staatsmijn Emma]] in [[Heerlen]], [[The Netherlands|Netherlands]], 1918
Kobe port tower11s3200.jpg|Kobe Port Tower, [[Japan]], 1963.
Mcdonnell planetarium slsc.jpg|Saint Louis Science Center's James S. McDonnell Planetarium, St. Louis, [[Missouri]], 1963.
Newcastle International Airport Control Tower.jpg|Newcastle International Airport control tower, Newcastle upon Tyne, [[England]], 1967.
Jested 002.JPG|Ještěd Transmission Tower, [[Czech Republic]], 1968.
Catedral1 Rodrigo Marfan.jpg|Cathedral of Brasília, [[Brazil]], 1970.
Ciechanow_water_tower.jpg|Hyperboloid water tower with toroidal tank, Ciechanów, [[Poland]], 1972.
Toronto - ON - Roy Thomson Hall.jpg|Roy Thomson Hall, [[Toronto]], [[Canada]], 1982.
Thtr300 kuehlturm.jpg|The THTR-300 [[cooling tower]] for the now decommissioned thorium [[nuclear reactor]] in Hamm-Uentrop, [[Germany]], 1983.
Bridge over Corporation Street - geograph.org.uk - 809089.jpg|The Corporation Street Bridge, [[Manchester]], [[England]], 1999.
Killesberg Tower.jpg|The [[Killesberg|Killesberg Tower]] observation tower, [[Stuttgart]], [[Germany]], 2001.
BMW-Welt at night 2.JPG|[[BMW Welt]], (BMW World), museum and event venue, [[Munich]], [[Germany]], 2007.
Canton tower in asian games opening ceremony.jpg|The [[Canton Tower]], [[China]], 2010.
Les Essarts-le-Roi Château d'eau.JPG|The [[Essarts-le-Roi]] water tower, [[France]].
... the equation of the unit sphere , and change the vector to a bivector form, such as . The equation of the sphere then breaks up into the system of the two following,In this passage is the operator giving the scalar part of a quaternion, and is the "tensor", now called norm, of a quaternion.and suggests our considering and as two real and rectangular vectors, such that
Hence it is easy to infer that if we assume , where is a vector in a given position, the new real vector will terminate on the surface of a double-sheeted and equilateral hyperboloid; and that if, on the other hand, we assume , then the locus of the extremity of the real vector will be an equilateral but single-sheeted hyperboloid. The study of these two hyperboloids is, therefore, in this way connected very simply, through biquaternions, with the study of the sphere; ...
A modern view of the unification of the sphere and hyperboloid uses the idea of a conic section as a slice of a quadratic form. Instead of a conical surface, one requires conical in four-dimensional space with points determined by . First consider the conical hypersurface
In the theory of , a unit quasi-sphere is the subset of a quadratic space consisting of the such that the quadratic norm of is one.Ian R. Porteous (1995) Clifford Algebras and the Classical Groups, pages 22, 24 & 106, Cambridge University Press
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