Abstract

Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton inspired generations of researchers to study properties of elliptic, hyperbolic, and parabolic paths of planets and other astronomical objects orbiting around the Sun. The books of these two Old Masters “Astronomia Nova” and “Principia…” were originally written in the geometrical language. However, the following generations of researchers translated the geometrical language of these Old Masters into the infinitesimal calculus independently discovered by Newton and Leibniz. In our attempt we will try to return back to the original geometrical language and to present several figures with possible hidden properties of parabolic orbits. For the description of events on parabolic orbits we will employ the interplay of the directrix of parabola discovered by Pappus of Alexandria, the pedal curve with the pedal point in the focus discovered by Apollonius of Perga (The Great Geometer), and the focus occupied by our Sun discovered in several stages by Aristarchus, Copernicus, Kepler and Isaac Newton (The Great Mathematician). We will study properties of this PAN Parabola with the aim to extract some hidden parameters behind that visible parabolic orbit in the Aristotelian World. In the Plato’s Realm some curves carrying hidden information might be waiting for our research. One such curve - the evolute of parabola - discovered Newton behind his famous gravitational law. We have used the Castillon’s cardioid as the curve describing the tangent velocity of objects on the parabolic orbit. In the PAN Parabola we have newly used six parameters introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - abscissa, ordinate, length of tangent, subtangent, length of normal, and subnormal. We have obtained formulae both for the tangent and normal velocities for objects on the parabolic orbit. We have also obtained the moment of tangent momentum and the moment of normal momentum. Both moments are constant on the whole parabolic orbit and that is why we should not observe the precession of parabolic orbit. We have discovered the Ptolemy’s Circle with the diameter a (distance between the vertex of parabola and its focus) where we see both the tangent and normal velocities of orbiting objects. In this case the Ptolemy’s Circle plays a role of the hodograph rotating on the parabolic orbit without sliding. In the Plato’s Realm some other curves might be hidden and have been waiting for our future research. Have we found the Arriadne’s Thread leading out of the Labyrinth or are we still lost in the Labyrinth?

Highlights

  • The famous quote of Heraclitus “Nature loves to hide” was described in details by Pierre Hadot in 2008

  • Can we try to employ the Castillon - Leibniz concept in order to get the needed tangent and normal velocities for objects on parabolic orbit? Can we find a hodograph circle around the PAN Parabola? Who can support us in this research? How about the Great Old Master - Claudius Ptolemy and his Circles?

  • We propose to use the very-well known Antikythera Mechanism as an analogy for the visible PAN Parabola - a part of our Aristotelian World - connected deeply with invisible curves from the Plato’s Realm - Pappus’ Directrix, Apollonius’ auxiliary Circle, Newton’s Evolute, Castillon’s cardioid, Leibniz’s six parameters, Ptolemy’s Circle (Hodograph)

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Summary

Introduction

The famous quote of Heraclitus “Nature loves to hide” was described in details by Pierre Hadot in 2008. Parabola is a very original conic section with its own Beauty and Secrets Though, it has only one focus, it might reveal similar properties as Her Sisters Ellipse and Hyperbola. Pappus of Alexandria discovered the directrix and focus of the parabola, and Apollonius of Perga systematically revealed numerous properties of the parabola This Ancient Treasure passed into the hands of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Huygens, Newton, Leibniz and many others. Hamilton in 1847 discovered how to find the tangent velocity for the elliptic orbit using the auxiliary circle of that ellipse This technique works very well for hyperbola with two foci, too. Another important inspiration came to us from Johann Castillon with his cardioid - the inversion curve to parabola This curve might bring an information about the tangent velocity of an object on parabolic orbits. In this contribution we have been working with these mathematical objects from the Plato’s Realm: 1. Parabola properties discovered by Apollonius of Perga - the Great Geometer - and many his scholars

Directrix and focus of parabola discovered by Pappus of Alexandria
Hodograph
Some Properties of the PAN Parabola
C æçççççè1
Newton’s Parabola Observed from the Newton’s Evolute
10. Conclusions
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