Ellipses
📌 What is an Ellipse?
An ellipse is the set of all points in a plane such that the sum of the distances from two fixed points (called foci) to any point on the ellipse is constant. An ellipse looks like a stretched or flattened circle.
Standard Form Equations of an Ellipse
Horizontal Major Axis:
\( \frac{(x - h)^2}{a^2} + \frac{(y - k)^2}{b^2} = 1 \) where \( a > b \)
- Center: \( (h, k) \)
- Major axis is horizontal (left-right)
- Vertices: \( (h \pm a, k) \)
- Co-vertices: \( (h, k \pm b) \)
- Foci: \( (h \pm c, k) \) where \( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \)
Vertical Major Axis:
\( \frac{(x - h)^2}{b^2} + \frac{(y - k)^2}{a^2} = 1 \) where \( a > b \)
- Center: \( (h, k) \)
- Major axis is vertical (up-down)
- Vertices: \( (h, k \pm a) \)
- Co-vertices: \( (h \pm b, k) \)
- Foci: \( (h, k \pm c) \) where \( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \)
Key Rule - Identifying Major Axis:
⚠️ Important: \( a \) is always the larger value!
- If the larger denominator is under \( x \)-term → Horizontal major axis
- If the larger denominator is under \( y \)-term → Vertical major axis
- \( a \) = semi-major axis (half the major axis length)
- \( b \) = semi-minor axis (half the minor axis length)
Finding Center, Vertices, and Co-vertices
From Standard Form:
- Find the center \( (h, k) \) directly from the equation
- Identify \( a \) and \( b \): Take square roots of denominators
- Determine which is larger to find the major axis direction
- Calculate vertices by moving \( a \) units along the major axis
- Calculate co-vertices by moving \( b \) units along the minor axis
📝 Example 1 - Horizontal Major Axis:
Find center, vertices, and co-vertices of \( \frac{(x - 3)^2}{25} + \frac{(y + 2)^2}{9} = 1 \)
Step 1: Center: \( (3, -2) \)
Step 2: \( a^2 = 25 \), so \( a = 5 \); \( b^2 = 9 \), so \( b = 3 \)
Step 3: Since 25 > 9 and 25 is under \( x \)-term, major axis is horizontal
Step 4: Vertices (move 5 units left/right from center):
\( (3 + 5, -2) = (8, -2) \) and \( (3 - 5, -2) = (-2, -2) \)
Step 5: Co-vertices (move 3 units up/down from center):
\( (3, -2 + 3) = (3, 1) \) and \( (3, -2 - 3) = (3, -5) \)
📝 Example 2 - Vertical Major Axis:
Find center, vertices, and co-vertices of \( \frac{(x + 1)^2}{16} + \frac{(y - 4)^2}{36} = 1 \)
Center: \( (-1, 4) \)
\( a^2 = 36 \), so \( a = 6 \); \( b^2 = 16 \), so \( b = 4 \)
Since 36 > 16 and 36 is under \( y \)-term, major axis is vertical
Vertices: \( (-1, 4 + 6) = (-1, 10) \) and \( (-1, 4 - 6) = (-1, -2) \)
Co-vertices: \( (-1 + 4, 4) = (3, 4) \) and \( (-1 - 4, 4) = (-5, 4) \)
Length of Major and Minor Axes
Formulas:
Length of Major Axis:
\( 2a \)
The distance between the two vertices
Length of Minor Axis:
\( 2b \)
The distance between the two co-vertices
📝 Examples - Axis Lengths:
Example 1: \( \frac{x^2}{49} + \frac{y^2}{25} = 1 \)
\( a^2 = 49 \), so \( a = 7 \); \( b^2 = 25 \), so \( b = 5 \)
Major axis length: \( 2a = 2(7) = 14 \)
Minor axis length: \( 2b = 2(5) = 10 \)
Example 2: \( \frac{(x - 2)^2}{9} + \frac{(y + 1)^2}{16} = 1 \)
\( a = 4 \) (larger), \( b = 3 \) (smaller)
Major axis length: \( 2(4) = 8 \)
Minor axis length: \( 2(3) = 6 \)
Finding the Foci of an Ellipse
The Relationship Formula:
\( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \)
Where:
- \( c \) = distance from center to each focus
- \( a \) = semi-major axis (larger value)
- \( b \) = semi-minor axis (smaller value)
- Foci are always on the major axis
Steps to Find Foci:
- Identify \( a \) and \( b \) from the equation
- Calculate \( c \) using \( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \)
- Determine major axis direction (horizontal or vertical)
- Move \( c \) units from center along the major axis
📝 Example 1 - Horizontal:
Find the foci of \( \frac{(x - 1)^2}{36} + \frac{(y + 3)^2}{20} = 1 \)
Step 1: Center: \( (1, -3) \)
\( a^2 = 36 \), so \( a = 6 \); \( b^2 = 20 \), so \( b = \sqrt{20} = 2\sqrt{5} \)
Step 2: Calculate \( c \):
\( c^2 = 36 - 20 = 16 \), so \( c = 4 \)
Step 3: Major axis is horizontal (36 is under \( x \)-term)
Step 4: Foci are at:
\( (1 + 4, -3) = (5, -3) \) and \( (1 - 4, -3) = (-3, -3) \)
📝 Example 2 - Vertical:
Find the foci of \( \frac{x^2}{9} + \frac{y^2}{25} = 1 \)
Center: \( (0, 0) \)
\( a = 5, b = 3 \) (major axis is vertical)
\( c^2 = 25 - 9 = 16 \), so \( c = 4 \)
Foci: \( (0, 4) \) and \( (0, -4) \)
Writing Equations from Graphs
Steps:
- Identify the center \( (h, k) \) from the graph
- Find \( a \) by counting units from center to a vertex
- Find \( b \) by counting units from center to a co-vertex
- Determine orientation (horizontal or vertical major axis)
- Write equation with larger value under the term matching major axis direction
📝 Example - From Graph:
An ellipse has center at \( (2, -1) \), vertices at \( (2, 4) \) and \( (2, -6) \), and co-vertices at \( (5, -1) \) and \( (-1, -1) \). Write the equation.
Step 1: Center: \( (2, -1) \)
Step 2: Distance from center to vertex:
\( a = |4 - (-1)| = 5 \)
Step 3: Distance from center to co-vertex:
\( b = |5 - 2| = 3 \)
Step 4: Major axis is vertical (vertices aligned vertically)
Equation: \( \frac{(x - 2)^2}{9} + \frac{(y + 1)^2}{25} = 1 \)
Writing Equations Using Properties
Given Vertices and Co-vertices:
- Find center using midpoint of vertices
- Calculate \( a \) (distance from center to vertex)
- Calculate \( b \) (distance from center to co-vertex)
- Write equation in standard form
Given Foci and Vertices:
- Find center (midpoint of vertices or foci)
- Calculate \( a \) from vertices
- Calculate \( c \) from foci
- Use \( b^2 = a^2 - c^2 \) to find \( b \)
- Write equation
📝 Example - From Foci and Vertices:
Write the equation of an ellipse with vertices at \( (\pm 5, 0) \) and foci at \( (\pm 3, 0) \).
Step 1: Center is at origin \( (0, 0) \)
Step 2: \( a = 5 \) (distance from center to vertex)
Step 3: \( c = 3 \) (distance from center to focus)
Step 4: Find \( b \):
\( b^2 = a^2 - c^2 = 25 - 9 = 16 \), so \( b = 4 \)
Step 5: Major axis is horizontal
Equation: \( \frac{x^2}{25} + \frac{y^2}{16} = 1 \)
Converting from General to Standard Form
Method: Completing the Square
General form: \( Ax^2 + By^2 + Cx + Dy + E = 0 \)
- Group x-terms and y-terms separately
- Factor out coefficients of \( x^2 \) and \( y^2 \) if needed
- Complete the square for both x and y
- Move constant to right side
- Divide by the constant to get 1 on the right side
- Simplify to standard form
📝 Example - Completing the Square:
Convert \( 4x^2 + 9y^2 - 8x + 36y + 4 = 0 \) to standard form
Step 1: Group terms:
\( (4x^2 - 8x) + (9y^2 + 36y) = -4 \)
Step 2: Factor out coefficients:
\( 4(x^2 - 2x) + 9(y^2 + 4y) = -4 \)
Step 3: Complete the square:
For x: \( (\frac{-2}{2})^2 = 1 \)
For y: \( (\frac{4}{2})^2 = 4 \)
\( 4(x^2 - 2x + 1) + 9(y^2 + 4y + 4) = -4 + 4(1) + 9(4) \)
\( 4(x - 1)^2 + 9(y + 2)^2 = 36 \)
Step 4: Divide by 36:
\( \frac{(x - 1)^2}{9} + \frac{(y + 2)^2}{4} = 1 \)
Center: \( (1, -2) \), \( a = 3, b = 2 \)
📝 Example 2 - More Practice:
Convert \( 9x^2 + 4y^2 + 54x - 16y + 61 = 0 \)
Group: \( (9x^2 + 54x) + (4y^2 - 16y) = -61 \)
Factor: \( 9(x^2 + 6x) + 4(y^2 - 4y) = -61 \)
Complete square: \( 9(x^2 + 6x + 9) + 4(y^2 - 4y + 4) = -61 + 81 + 16 \)
\( 9(x + 3)^2 + 4(y - 2)^2 = 36 \)
Divide by 36: \( \frac{(x + 3)^2}{4} + \frac{(y - 2)^2}{9} = 1 \)
Center: \( (-3, 2) \), major axis is vertical
Finding Properties from General Form
Direct Method (without converting):
From \( Ax^2 + By^2 + Cx + Dy + E = 0 \):
Center:
\( h = -\frac{C}{2A}, \quad k = -\frac{D}{2B} \)
Note: For other properties, it's easier to convert to standard form first.
⚡ Quick Summary
| Property | Formula/Value |
|---|---|
| Standard Form (Horizontal) | \( \frac{(x-h)^2}{a^2} + \frac{(y-k)^2}{b^2} = 1 \) |
| Standard Form (Vertical) | \( \frac{(x-h)^2}{b^2} + \frac{(y-k)^2}{a^2} = 1 \) |
| Center | \( (h, k) \) |
| Major Axis Length | \( 2a \) |
| Minor Axis Length | \( 2b \) |
| Foci Distance | \( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \) |
- \( a \) is always the larger value (semi-major axis)
- Major axis is where the larger denominator appears
- Vertices are on the major axis, co-vertices on the minor axis
- Foci are always on the major axis, inside the ellipse
- Use completing the square to convert general to standard form
- Sum of distances from any point on ellipse to both foci is constant = \( 2a \)
📚 Important Relationships
Key Equation:
\( c^2 = a^2 - b^2 \)
Remember:
- Always \( a > b \) (by definition)
- Always \( c < a \) (foci are inside the ellipse)
- If \( a = b \), the ellipse becomes a circle
- Distance from center to vertex = \( a \)
- Distance from center to co-vertex = \( b \)
- Distance from center to focus = \( c \)
