Conchoid of Dürer explained

In geometry, the conchoid of Dürer, also called Dürer's shell curve, is a plane, algebraic curve, named after Albrecht Dürer and introduced in 1525. It is not a true conchoid.

Construction

Suppose two perpendicular lines are given, with intersection point O. For concreteness we may assume that these are the coordinate axes and that O is the origin, that is (0, 0). Let points and move on the axes in such a way that, a constant. On the line, extended as necessary, mark points and at a fixed distance from . The locus of the points and is Dürer's conchoid.

Equation

The equation of the conchoid in Cartesian form is

2y2(x2+y2)-2by2(x+y)+(b2-3a2)y2-a2x2+2a2b(x+y)+a2(a2-b2)=0.

In parametric form the equation is given by

\begin{align} x&=

b\cos(t)
\cos(t)-\sin(t)

+a\cos(t),\\ y&=a\sin(t), \end{align}

where the parameter is measured in radians.[1]

Properties

The curve has two components, asymptotic to the lines

y=\pma/\sqrt2

. Each component is a rational curve. If a > b there is a loop, if a = b there is a cusp at (0,a).

Special cases include:

y=\pma/\sqrt2

together with the circle

x2+y2=a2

;

The envelope of straight lines used in the construction form a parabola (as seen in Durer's original diagram above) and therefore the curve is a point-glissette formed by a line and one of its points sliding respectively against a parabola and one of its tangents.

History

It was first described by the German painter and mathematician Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) in his book Underweysung der Messung (Instruction in Measurement with Compass and Straightedge p. 38), calling it Ein muschellini (Conchoid or Shell). Dürer only drew one branch of the curve.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dürer's Conchoid. beware that the constants and are interchanged in this source