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A super ellipse is a geometrical figure which in a cartesian coordinate system can be described as the set of all points (x, y) with-
where n > 0 and a and b are the radii of the oval shape. The case n = 2 yields an ordinary ellipse; increasing n beyond 2 yields the hyperellipses which increasingly resemble rectangles; decreasing n below 2 yields hypoellipses which develop pointy corners in the x and y directions and increasingly resemble a cross.
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The super ellipse is further generalized as:
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Though often credited with its invention, the Danish poet and scientist Piet Hein (1905-1996) did not discover the super-ellipse. The general cartesian notation of the form comes from the French mathematician Gabriel Lamé (1795-1870) who generalized the equation for the ellipse.
However Piet Hein did popularize the use of the super-ellipse in architecture, urban planning and furniture making, and he did invent the super-egg or super-ellipsoid by starting with the super-ellipse
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and revolving it about the x-axis. Unlike a regular ellipsoid, the super-ellipsoid can stand upright on a flat surface.
City planners in Stockholm, Sweden needed a solution for a roundabout in their old city square Sergels Torg. Piet Hein's super-ellipse provided the needed aesthetic and practical solution.
In 1969, negotiators in Paris for the Vietnam War could not agree on the shape of the negotiating table. Piet Hein designed a huge super-ellipse shaped table which accommodated all parties.
The super-ellipse was used for the shape of the 1968 Azteca Olympic Stadium [1], [2] in Mexico CityMexico City ( Spanish: Ciudad de Mexico known in Pre-Columbian times as Tenochtitlan is the capital of Mexico; it geographically spans both the Mexican Federal District and part of the state of Mexico, to the north of the Federal District. Mexico City is.
- Man is the animal that draws lines which he himself then stumbles over. In the whole pattern of civilization there have been two tendencies, one toward straight lines and rectangular patterns and one toward circular lines. There are reasons, mechanical and psychological, for both tendencies. Things made with straight lines fit well together and save space. And we can move easily -- physically or mentally -- around things made with round lines. But we are in a straitjacket, having to accept one or the other, when often some intermediate form would be better. To draw something freehand -- such as the patchwork traffic circle they tried in Stockholm -- will not do. It isn't fixed, isn't definite like a circle or square. You don't know what it is. It isn't esthetically satisfying. The super-ellipse solved the problem. It is neither round nor rectangular, but in between. Yet it is fixed, it is definite -- it has a unity. -- Piet Hein
1 See also
- Ellipse
- Ellipsoid, a higher dimensional analog of an ellipse
- SpheroidA spheroid is a quadric surface in three dimensions obtained by rotating an ellipse about one of its principal axes. If the ellipse is rotated about its major axis, the surface is called a prolate spheroid (similar to the shape of a rugby ball). If the mi, the ellipsoids obtained by rotating an ellipse about its major or minor axis.
- HyperbolaFor hyperbole, the figure of speech, see hyperbole. In mathematics, a hyperbola is a type of conic section. Geometrically, it is defined as the intersection between a cone and a plane which cuts through both halves of the cone. Analytically, it is defined
- ParabolaA parabola is a conic section generated by the intersection of a cone, and a plane tangent to the cone or parallel to some plane tangent to the cone. If the plane is itself tangent to the cone, one would obtain a degenerate parabola, a line. A parabola ca
- EllipsisThis article is not about ellipses, the flattened circle shape''. In printing and writing, an ellipsis (plural: ellipses is a row of three dots or asterisks ( ) indicating an intentional omission. This punctuation mark is also called a suspension point .
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