Pedal curve

Pedal curve
Geometric construction of the pedal of C with respect to P

In the differential geometry of curves, a pedal curve is a curve derived by construction from a given curve (as is, for example, the involute).

Let C be a given curve and P a fixed point (called the pedal point). At any point R on C let T be the tangent line at R. There is then a unique point X on T which is either P (in case P lies on T) or forms with P a line perpendicular to T. The pedal curve is the set of all such X for all R on C. (The point X is called the foot of the perpendicular to T from P.) Similarly, there is a unique point Y on the line normal to C at R so that PY is perpendicular to the normal, so PXRY is a (possibly degenerate) rectangle. The locus of points Y is called the contrapedal curve.

The orthotomic of a curve is its pedal magnified by a factor of 2 so that the center of similarity is P. This is locus of the reflection of P through the tangent line L

Contents

Geometrical properties

Consider a right angle moving rigidly so that one leg remains on the point P and the other leg is tangent to the curve. Then the vertex of this angle is X and traces out the pedal curve. As the angle moves, its direction of motion at P is parallel to PX and its direction of motion at R is parallel to the tangent T = RX. Therefore the instant center of rotation is the intersection of the line perpendicular to PX at P and perpendicular to RX at R, and this point is Y. If follows that the tangent to the pedal at X is perpendicular to XY.

Draw a circle with diameter PR, then it circumscribes rectangle PXRY and XY is another diameter. The circle and the pedal are both perpendicular to XY so they are tangent at X. Hence the pedal is the envelope of the circles with diameters PR where R lies on the curve.

The line YR is normal to the curve and the envelope of such normals is its evolute. Therefore YR is tangent to the evolute and the point Y is the foot of the perpendicular from P to this tangent, in other words Y is on the pedal of the evolute. It follows that the contrapedal of a curve is the pedal of its evolute.

Let C′ be the curve obtained by shrinking C by a factor of 2 toward P. Then the point R′ corresponding to R is the center of the rectangle PXRY, and the tangent to C′ at R′ bisects this rectangle parallel to PY and XR. A ray of light starting from P and reflected by C′ at R' will then pass through Y. The reflected ray, when extended, is the line XY which is perpendicular to the pedal of C. The envelope of lines perpendicular to the pedal is then the envelope of reflected rays or the catacaustic of C′. This proves that the catacaustic of a curve is the evolute of its orthotomic.

As noted earlier, the circle with diameter PR is tangent to the pedal. The center of this circle is R′ which follows the curve C′. It follows that the envelope of circles through a fixed point and whose centers lie on a given curve is the orthotomic of the curve.

Let D′ be a curve congruent to C′ and let D′ roll without slipping, as in the definition of a roulette, on C′ so that D′ is always the reflection of C′ with respect to the line to which they are mutually tangent. Then when the curves touch at R′ the point corresponding to P on the moving plane is X, and so the roulette is the pedal curve. Equivalently, the orthotomic of a curve is the roulette of the curve on its mirror image.

Example

Limaçon — pedal curve of a circle

When C is a circle the above discussion shows that the following definitions of a limaçon are equivalent:

  • It is the pedal of a circle.
  • It is the envelope of circles whose diameters have one endpoint on a fixed point and another endpoint which follow a circle.
  • It is the envelope of circles through a fixed point whose centers follow a circle.
  • It is the roulette formed by a circle rolling around a circle with the same radius.

We also have shown that the catacaustic of a circle is the evolute of a limaçon.


Equations

Another example : pedal curve of an ellipse
Contrapedal of the same ellipse
Pedal of the evolute of the ellipse : same as the contrapedal of the original ellipse

Let \vec{v} = P - R be the vector for R to P and write

\vec{v} = \vec{v}_{\parallel}+\vec{v}_\perp,

the tangential and normal components of \vec{v} with respect to the curve. Then \vec{v}_{\parallel} is the vector from R to X from which the position of X can be computed.

Specifically, if c is a parametrization of the curve then

t\mapsto c(t)+{ c'(t) \cdot (P-c(t))\over|c'(t)|^2} c'(t)

parametrises the pedal curve (disregarding points where c' is zero or undefined).

For a parametrically defined curve, its pedal curve with pedal point (0;0) is defined as

X[x,y]=\frac{(xy'-yx')y'}{x'^2 + y'^2}

Y[x,y]=\frac{(yx'-xy')x'}{x'^2 + y'^2}.

The contrapedal curve is given by:

t\mapsto P-{ c'(t) \cdot (P-c(t))\over|c'(t)|^2} c'(t)

With the same pedal point, the contrapedal curve is the pedal curve of the evolute of the given curve.

given
curve
pedal
point
pedal
curve
contrapedal
curve
line any point parallel line
circle on circumference cardioid
parabola on axis conchoid of de Sluze
parabola on tangent
of vertex
ophiuride
parabola focus line
other conic section focus circle
logarithmic spiral pole congruent log spiral congruent log spiral
epicycloid
hypocycloid
center rose rose
involute of circle center of circle Archimedean spiral the circle

Example

Pedal curves of unit circle:

c(t)=\begin{bmatrix} \cos(t) \\ \sin(t) \end{bmatrix}
c'(t)=\begin{bmatrix} -\sin(t) \\ \cos(t) \end{bmatrix}   and   | c'(t) | = 1
{ c'(t) \cdot ((x,y)-c(t))\over|c'(t)|^2}=y\cos(t)-x\sin(t)

thus, the pedal curve with pedal point (x,y) is:

\begin{bmatrix} \cos(t)-y\cos(t)\sin(t)+x\sin(t)^2 \\ \sin(t)-x\sin(t)\cos(t)+y\cos(t)^2  \end{bmatrix}

If the pedal point is at the center (i.e. (0,0)), the circle is its own pedal curve. If the pedal point is (1,0) the pedal curve is

\begin{bmatrix} \cos(t)+\sin(t)^2 \\ \sin(t)-\sin(t)\cos(t)\end{bmatrix}=\begin{bmatrix} 1 \\ 0\end{bmatrix}+(1-\cos(t))\begin{bmatrix} \cos(t) \\ \sin(t) \end{bmatrix}

i.e. a pedal point on the circumference gives a cardioid.

See also

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Pedal curve — Pedal Pe dal, a. [L. pedalis, fr. pes, pedis, foot. See {Foot}, and cf. {Pew}.] 1. Of or pertaining to the foot, or to feet, literally or figuratively; specifically (Zo[ o]l.), pertaining to the foot of a mollusk; as, the pedal ganglion. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Negative pedal curve — Circle negative pedal curve of a limaçon In the plane, for every point X other than P there is a unique line through X perpendicular to XP. For a given curve in the plane and a given fixed point P, called the pedal point, the negative pedal curve …   Wikipedia

  • Pedal — Pe dal, a. [L. pedalis, fr. pes, pedis, foot. See {Foot}, and cf. {Pew}.] 1. Of or pertaining to the foot, or to feet, literally or figuratively; specifically (Zo[ o]l.), pertaining to the foot of a mollusk; as, the pedal ganglion. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • Pedal — Pe dal, n. [Cf. F. p[ e]dale, It. pedale. See {Pedal}, a.] 1. (Mech.) A lever or key acted on by the foot, as in the pianoforte to raise the dampers, or in the organ to open and close certain pipes; a treadle, as in a lathe or a bicycle. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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