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Conic Sections

Did you happen to notice how you could make a circle, an ellipse, a parabola, or a
hyperbola by cutting various pieces through a cone? In mathematics this is called a
conic section where the certain curvature formed by the crossing of a plane with a
right circular cone. The intersection is a circle, an ellipse, a hyperbola, or a parabola
based on the degree of the plane with respect to the cone. Conics are plane arcs
that are the pathways of a position traveling in such a way that the proportion of
its length from a given point to its distance from a given line is a fixed value, which
is known as the irregularity of the curve. The curve is a circle if the variance is zero;
a parabola if equivalent to one; an ellipse if lower than one; and a hyperbola if
larger than one.

During Kepler's time, the popular belief was that all planetary orbits were circular.
According to Kepler's first law, every planet moves in an ellipse, with the Sun at the
ellipse's center. A set of all points is defined as an ellipse if the sum of the distances
between each point and two foci is a constant. Conic sections have a relation with
Johannes Kepler in regards of the movement of the celestial planets orbiting the
Sun. He discovered it equally convenient and crucial to explain his rules in
perspective of conic sections.

Overall, conic sections are useful not only in arithmetic, physics, and astronomy,
but even in a wide range of engineering applications. Conic section efficiency is
significant in areas like aerodynamics, where a level surface is required to
guarantee fluid motion and avoid disturbances. The two most widely known conics
in the actual world are circles and parabolas. Conics are so important that they can
be found in the products we consume and also in the folks we encounter. They not
simply exist in our world, but they actually aid us. In the discipline of astronomy,
hyperbolas have shown to be extremely useful.
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