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Square the Circle (Posted on 2004-10-28) Difficulty: 4 of 5
There is a family of curves on the Cartesian plane described by this form:

If n is equal to 2, then it describes an ellipse (if a = b, then it describes a circle).

If n is greater than 2, then this is a "superellipse" (if a = b, then this is a supercircle).

As n increases, the ellipse becomes more "rectangularish", and as n approaches ∞, the limit is a rectangle (or a square if a=b).

What value must n have such that the figure has an area exactly halfway between the associated ellipse (when n=2) and rectangle (when n=∞)?

The graphs below, calculated by varying n with a = b = 1, show this property. Note that as n approaches zero, the curve degenerates into two crossed lines along the x- and y-axes.

No Solution Yet Submitted by SilverKnight    
Rating: 3.0000 (4 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Question Quad I | Comment 1 of 9

Is there a way to describe just the part of the graph in the first quadrant?  I'm thinking that if there is a simpler equation that matches the first quadrant from 0¡Üx¡Üa, then we can deal with the area of that... because it's proportional.

Just a thought.  I don't know what I'm doing really =)


  Posted by nikki on 2004-10-28 18:05:13
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