- Straight lines and circles
    
 
 
- Conic sections 
  
 
- Other curves 
  
 
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If we light up a wall with an electric torch keeping
        it perpendicular to the wall, the lit portion is more or
        less circular. Let's now begin tilting the torch upwards:
        the circle deforms and assumes an oblong shape, like a
        serving tray or a stadium: it's an ellipse.
 
If we keep
        tilting the torch, the ellipse gets longer and longer.
        While one of its ends remains near us, the other moves
        further and further: if the wall were infinite, the lit
        area would become bigger and bigger, until for a certain
        inclination of the torch, it would become infinite. The
        figure thus obtained is a parabola.
 
If we tilt the torch even further, the lit area
        becomes even bigger, and it assumes the shape of a
        hyperbole.
 
The three figures which are obtained one after the
        other, or rather the curves that delimit them, are
        collectively called conical sections, since they are
        obtained sectioning a cone (in our case the cone of light
        projected by the torch) with a plane (the wall).
 
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Conical sections are often found in the most common
        situations: a table lamp draws two hyperboles on the
        wall, the shadow of a ball is an ellipse, a stone thrown
        by a sling takes a parabolic path. In the past, the
        theory of conical sections was essential to build
        sundials. In its apparent motion, the sun draws a
        circumference: the rays that pass by the tip of a
        sundial's stylus then form a cone, that cut by the wall
        creates a conical section, which at our latitudes is a
        hyperbole, on which the shadow of the stylus's tip moves.
 
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One can draw an ellipse using the great
        three-dimensional compasses which the Arab geometers
        had called the perfect compasses. The inclined
        rod that rotates around the vertical axis describes a
        cone, which is intersected by the drawing plane.
        According to the latter's inclination, one can obtain a
        circumference (if the plane is horizontal) or an ellipse,
        longer the more inclined the plane. If one could increase
        indefinitely the plane's inclination, one would obtain
        first a parabola and then a hyperbole.
 
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In the same way, depending on the machine's
        inclination, the plane of the water, which is always
        horizontal, intersects the water according to an ellipse,
        a parabola or a hyperbole. A second cone, symmetrical to
        the first, shows the two branches of the hyperbole.
 
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Other elliptical compasses, some of which are
        exhibited, can be built using the various properties of
        this curve: one can also find them on sale. A parabola or
        a hyperbole are more difficult to draw.
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