Bi- and multifocal curves and surfaces for gauges (Q2821972)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6629822
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Bi- and multifocal curves and surfaces for gauges |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6629822 |
Statements
26 September 2016
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Apollonius circle
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bifocal curve
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Birkhoff orthogonality
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multifocal Cassini curve
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convex distance function
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multifocal ellipse
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gauge
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generalized hyperbola
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generalized Minkowski space
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multifocal curve
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\(n\)-lemniscate
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sublevel set
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Voronoi cell
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Bi- and multifocal curves and surfaces for gauges (English)
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Bifocal curves in a Euclidean plane are defined by having a constant sum, absolute difference, product or ratio of distances to two given points, the focal points. They are, in this order, ellipses, hyperbolas, Cassini curves, or circles (``Apollonius circles''). Their defining properties naturally extend to higher dimensions and, in case of constant sum or product, to finitely many focal points. In the article at hand, the authors study multifocal curves and surfaces in real vector spaces of finite dimension endowed with a non-negative, positively homogeneous, and convex function \(\gamma\), the \textit{gauge,} to measure length (``generalized Minkowski spaces'').NEWLINENEWLINESome of their results generalize known facts from Euclidean geometry. For example the bisector of two points on a (multifocal) ellipse with respect to the opposite gauge intersects the convex hull of the focal points or confocal hyperbolas and ellipses intersect (under some regularity assumptions) orthogonally in Birkhoff sense, if the unit circle is a polygon. It is also possible to characterize non-strictly convex gauges, typically by the existence of line segments on multifocal surfaces. Gauges that are inner-product norms can for example be characterised by convexity of the sublevel sets associated to hyperbolas (``interior of one branch'') or by the fact that Apollonius surfaces are spheres.NEWLINENEWLINEResults on (multifocal) Cassini curves mostly refer to their shapes. An \(n\)-focal Cassini curve is star-shaped with respect to a given point if its radius is sufficiently large. For sufficiently small radius, it consist of star-shaped components around the focal points. However, the authors also present an exotic example of a Cassini curve with uncountably many components.
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