In geometry, a cardioid (from Greekκαρδιά (kardiá) 'heart') is a plane curve traced by a point on the perimeter of a circle that is rolling around a fixed circle of the same radius. It can also be defined as an epicycloid having a single cusp. It is also a type of sinusoidal spiral, and an inverse curve of the parabola with the focus as the center of inversion.[1] A cardioid can also be defined as the set of points of reflections of a fixed point on a circle through all tangents to the circle.[2]
The name was coined by Giovanni Salvemini in 1741[3] but the cardioid had been the subject of study decades beforehand.[4] Although named for its heart-like form, it is shaped more like the outline of the cross-section of a round apple without the stalk.[5]
A cardioid microphone exhibits an acoustic pickup pattern that, when graphed in two dimensions, resembles a cardioid (any 2d plane containing the 3d straight line of the microphone body). In three dimensions, the cardioid is shaped like an apple centred around the microphone which is the "stalk" of the apple.
Let be the common radius of the two generating circles with midpoints , the rolling angle and the origin the starting point (see picture). One gets the
A proof can be established using complex numbers and their common description as the complex plane. The rolling movement of the black circle on the blue one can be split into two rotations. In the complex plane a rotation around point (the origin) by an angle can be performed by multiplying a point (complex number) by . Hence
the rotation around point is,
the rotation around point is: .
A point of the cardioid is generated by rotating the origin around point and subsequently rotating around by the same angle :
From here one gets the parametric representation above:
(The trigonometric identities and were used.)
A cardioid is the inverse curve of a parabola with its focus at the center of inversion (see graph)
For the example shown in the graph the generator circles have radius . Hence the cardioid has the polar representation
and its inverse curve
which is a parabola (s. parabola in polar coordinates) with the equation in Cartesian coordinates.
Remark: Not every inverse curve of a parabola is a cardioid. For example, if a parabola is inverted across a circle whose center lies at the vertex of the parabola, then the result is a cissoid of Diocles.
In the previous section if one inverts additionally the tangents of the parabola one gets a pencil of circles through the center of inversion (origin). A detailed consideration shows: The midpoints of the circles lie on the perimeter of the fixed generator circle. (The generator circle is the inverse curve of the parabola's directrix.)
This property gives rise to the following simple method to draw a cardioid:
Choose a circle and a point on its perimeter,
draw circles containing with centers on , and
draw the envelope of these circles.
Proof with envelope condition
The envelope of the pencil of implicitly given curves with parameter consists of such points which are solutions of the non-linear system
which is the envelope condition. Note that means the partial derivative for parameter .
Let be the circle with midpoint and radius . Then has parametric representation . The pencil of circles with centers on containing point can be represented implicitly by
which is equivalent to
The second envelope condition is
One easily checks that the points of the cardioid with the parametric representation
fulfill the non-linear system above. The parameter is identical to the angle parameter of the cardioid.
Despite the two angles have different meanings (s. picture) one gets for the same line. Hence any secant line of the circle, defined above, is a tangent of the cardioid, too:
The cardioid is the envelope of the chords of a circle.
Remark:
The proof can be performed with help of the envelope conditions (see previous section) of an implicit pencil of curves:
is the pencil of secant lines of a circle (s. above) and
For fixed parameter t both the equations represent lines. Their intersection point is
which is a point of the cardioid with polar equation
The considerations made in the previous section give a proof that the caustic of a circle with light source on the perimeter of the circle is a cardioid.
If in the plane there is a light source at a point on the perimeter of a circle which is reflecting any ray, then the reflected rays within the circle are tangents of a cardioid.
Proof
As in the previous section the circle may have midpoint and radius . Its parametric representation is
The tangent at circle point has normal vector . Hence the reflected ray has the normal vector (see graph) and contains point . The reflected ray is part of the line with equation (see previous section)
which is tangent of the cardioid with polar equation
from the previous section.
Remark: For such considerations usually multiple reflections at the circle are neglected.
In a Cartesian coordinate system circle may have midpoint and radius . The tangent at circle point has the equation
The foot of the perpendicular from point on the tangent is point with the still unknown distance to the origin . Inserting the point into the equation of the tangent yields
which is the polar equation of a cardioid.
Remark: If point is not on the perimeter of the circle , one gets a limaçon of Pascal.
The evolute of a curve is the locus of centers of curvature. In detail: For a curve with radius of curvature the evolute has the representation
with the suitably oriented unit normal.
For a cardioid one gets:
The evolute of a cardioid is another cardioid, one third as large, and facing the opposite direction (s. picture).
For the cardioid with parametric representation
the unit normal is
and the radius of curvature
Hence the parametric equations of the evolute are
These equations describe a cardioid a third as large, rotated 180 degrees and shifted along the x-axis by .
Choosing other positions of the cardioid within the coordinate system results in different equations. The picture shows the 4 most common positions of a cardioid and their polar equations.
In complex analysis, the image of any circle through the origin under the map is a cardioid. One application of this result is that the boundary of the central period-1 component of the Mandelbrot set is a cardioid given by the equation
The Mandelbrot set contains an infinite number of slightly distorted copies of itself and the central bulb of any of these smaller copies is an approximate cardioid.
Certain caustics can take the shape of cardioids. The catacaustic of a circle with respect to a point on the circumference is a cardioid. Also, the catacaustic of a cone with respect to rays parallel to a generating line is a surface whose cross section is a cardioid. This can be seen, as in the photograph to the right, in a conical cup partially filled with liquid when a light is shining from a distance and at an angle equal to the angle of the cone.[6] The shape of the curve at the bottom of a cylindrical cup is half of a nephroid, which looks quite similar.