In mathematics, a conical spiral, also known as a conical helix, [1] is a space curve on a right circular cone, whose floor projection is a plane spiral. If the floor projection is a logarithmic spiral, it is called conchospiral (from conch).
In the --plane a spiral with parametric representation
a third coordinate can be added such that the space curve lies on the cone with equation :
Such curves are called conical spirals. [2] They were known to Pappos.
Parameter is the slope of the cone's lines with respect to the --plane.
A conical spiral can instead be seen as the orthogonal projection of the floor plan spiral onto the cone.
The following investigation deals with conical spirals of the form and , respectively.
The slope at a point of a conical spiral is the slope of this point's tangent with respect to the --plane. The corresponding angle is its slope angle (see diagram):
A spiral with gives:
For an archimedean spiral is and hence its slope is
Because of this property a conchospiral is called an equiangular conical spiral.
The length of an arc of a conical spiral can be determined by
For an archimedean spiral the integral can be solved with help of a table of integrals, analogously to the planar case:
For a logarithmic spiral the integral can be solved easily:
In other cases elliptical integrals occur.
For the development of a conical spiral [3] the distance of a curve point to the cone's apex and the relation between the angle and the corresponding angle of the development have to be determined:
Hence the polar representation of the developed conical spiral is:
In case of the polar representation of the developed curve is
which describes a spiral of the same type.
In case of a logarithmic spiral the development is a logarithmic spiral:
The collection of intersection points of the tangents of a conical spiral with the --plane (plane through the cone's apex) is called its tangent trace.
For the conical spiral
the tangent vector is
and the tangent:
The intersection point with the --plane has parameter and the intersection point is
gives and the tangent trace is a spiral. In the case (hyperbolic spiral) the tangent trace degenerates to a circle with radius (see diagram). For one has and the tangent trace is a logarithmic spiral, which is congruent to the floor plan, because of the self-similarity of a logarithmic spiral.
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