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Old October 16th, 2008, 07:23 AM
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earboth earboth is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by magentarita View Post
A reflecting telescope contains a mirror shaped like a paraboloid of revolution. If the mirror is 4 inches across at its opening and is 3 feet deep (ähemm! are you sure?) , where will the collected light be concentrated?
I assume that the paraboloid has an opening of 4'' and a depth of 3''. If so:

The cross-section of the paraboloid through the focus and the vertex of the paraboloid must be a parabola. Use a coordinate system where the vertex is V(0, 0) and the point P(3, 2) are located on the parabola.

The general equation of a parabola opening to the right is:

y^2 = 2p\cdot x

Use the coordinates of P to calculate p. (I've got p = \frac23)

Then the focus F is the point where all parallel light rays will be concentrated. F has the coordinates F\left(\frac p2\ ,\ 0\right)
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