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Orthogonal trajectory

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Concentric circles with orthogonal trajectories (1. example)
Parabolas with orthogonal trajectories (2. example)

In mathematics, an orthogonal trajectory is a curve which intersects any curve of a given pencil of (planar) curves orthogonally.

For example, the orthogonal trajectories of a pencil of concentric circles are the lines through their common center (see diagram).

Suitable methods for the determination of orthogonal trajectories are provided by solving differential equations. The standard method establishes a first order ordinary differential equation and solves it by separation of variables. Both steps may be difficult or even impossible. In such cases one has to apply numerical methods.

Orthogonal trajectories are used in mathematics, for example as curved coordinate systems (i.e. elliptic coordinates) and appear in physics as electric fields and their equipotential curves.

If the trajectory intersects the given curves by an arbitrary (but fixed) angle, one gets an isogonal trajectory.

Determination of the orthogonal trajectory

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In cartesian coordinates

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Generally, one assumes that the pencil of curves is given implicitly by an equation

(0) 1. example 2. example

where is the parameter of the pencil. If the pencil is given explicitly by an equation , one can change the representation into an implicit one: . For the considerations below, it is supposed that all necessary derivatives do exist.

Step 1.

Differentiating implicitly for yields

(1) in 1. example 2. example
Step 2.

Now it is assumed that equation (0) can be solved for parameter , which can thus be eliminated from equation (1). One gets the differential equation of first order

(2) in 1. example 2. example

which is fulfilled by the given pencil of curves.

Step 3.

Because the slope of the orthogonal trajectory at a point is the negative multiplicative inverse of the slope of the given curve at this point, the orthogonal trajectory satisfies the differential equation of first order

(3) in 1. example 2. example
Step 4.

This differential equation can (hopefully) be solved by a suitable method.
For both examples separation of variables is suitable. The solutions are:
in example 1, the lines and
in example 2, the ellipses

In polar coordinates

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If the pencil of curves is represented implicitly in polar coordinates by

(0p)

one determines, alike the cartesian case, the parameter free differential equation

(1p)
(2p)

of the pencil. The differential equation of the orthogonal trajectories is then (see Redheffer & Port p. 65, Heuser, p. 120)

(3p)
Orthogonal cardioids

Example: Cardioids:

(0p) (in diagram: blue)
(1p)

Elimination of yields the differential equation of the given pencil:

(2p)

Hence the differential equation of the orthogonal trajectories is:

(3p)

After solving this differential equation by separation of variables one gets

which describes the pencil of cardioids (red in diagram), symmetric to the given pencil.

Isogonal trajectory

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A curve, which intersects any curve of a given pencil of (planar) curves by a fixed angle is called isogonal trajectory.

Between the slope of an isogonal trajectory and the slope of the curve of the pencil at a point the following relation holds:

This relation is due to the formula for . For one gets the condition for the orthogonal trajectory.

For the determination of the isogonal trajectory one has to adjust the 3. step of the instruction above:

3. step (isog. traj.)

The differential equation of the isogonal trajectory is:

  • (3i)
Isogonal trajectories of concentric circles for

For the 1. example (concentric circles) and the angle one gets

(3i)

This is a special kind of differential equation, which can be transformed by the substitution into a differential equation, that can be solved by separation of variables. After reversing the substitution one gets the equation of the solution:

Introducing polar coordinates leads to the simple equation

which describes logarithmic spirals (see diagram).

Numerical methods

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In case that the differential equation of the trajectories can not be solved by theoretical methods, one has to solve it numerically, for example by Runge–Kutta methods.

See also

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References

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  • A. Jeffrey: Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Hartcourt/Academic Press, 2002, ISBN 0-12-382592-X, p. 233.
  • S. B. Rao: Differential Equations, University Press, 1996, ISBN 81-7371-023-6, p. 95.
  • R. M. Redheffer, D. Port: Differential Equations: Theory and Applications, Jones & Bartlett, 1991, ISBN 0-86720-200-9, p. 63.
  • H. Heuser: Gewöhnliche Differentialgleichungen, Vieweg+Teubner, 2009, ISBN 978-3-8348-0705-2, p. 120.
  • Tenenbaum, Morris; Pollard, Harry (2012), Ordinary Differential Equations, Dover Books on Mathematics, Courier Dover, p. 115, ISBN 9780486134642.
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