Theorem
The curve defined by the parametric equations
has the same shape as the curve defined in polar coordinates by the equation
Proof
Starting from
, and using the
polar to cartesian formulas
and
double angle formulas we get the cartesian parametric equations:
Simply replacing with t yields equations (1) and (2), with a shift to the left by r.
Another proof
Equations (1) and (2) define a cardioid whose cuspidal point is (
r, 0). To convert to polar, the cusp should preferably be at the
origin, so subtract
from the
abscissa. Replacing
by
yields
The polar radius is given by
Expanding this yields
We can simplify this by noticing that
and
Thus,
Then, since
it follows that
Area derivation
The objective is to integrate the area of the cardioid whose equation in polar coordinates is
The
integral is
- .
Integration with respect to
dr yields
A &{}= int_0^{2pi} left[{1 over 2} r^2 right]_0^{(1-costheta)} , dtheta
&{}= int_0^{2pi} {1over 2} (1 - costheta)^2 , dtheta
&{}= int_0^{2pi} {1 over 2} (1 - 2 costheta + cos^2 theta) , dtheta.
end{align}
Distribute the integral among the three terms, and integrate the first two, to obtain
The second term vanishes, and integrating the third term yields
A &{}= {1 over 2} left{ 2pi + left[{1over 2}theta +{1over 4}sin 2theta right]_0^{2pi} right}
&{}= pi + {1over 2} left[pi + {1over 4} (sin 4pi - sin 0)right].
end{align}
The last term within brackets vanishes, so that
Cardioids of any size are all similar to each other, so increasing the cardioid's linear size by a factor of a increases the cardioid's areal size by a factor of a2, Q.E.D. (return to article)