Suppose you have a pair of lines passing through origin, a x 2 </msup> +

Paul Duran

Paul Duran

Answered question

2022-05-09

Suppose you have a pair of lines passing through origin, a x 2 + 2 h x y + b y 2 = 0, how would you find the equation of pair of angle bisectors for this pair of lines. I can do this for 2 separate lines, but I am not able to figure it out for a pair of lines. Can someone please help.

Answer & Explanation

Taniya Wood

Taniya Wood

Beginner2022-05-10Added 19 answers

Let's consider an easier case, when the given lines have the form y = m x and y = n x (with m n, of course).

The points on the angle bisectors satisfy the conditions that their distance from the two lines is the same. So you have, for such a point ( x , y ),
| y m x | 1 + m 2 = | y n x | 1 + n 2
By squaring, we get
( y m x ) 2 ( 1 + n 2 ) = ( y n x ) 2 ( 1 + m 2 )
and expanding
( y m x ) 2 ( y n x ) 2 = m 2 ( y n x ) 2 n 2 ( y m x ) 2 .
The left hand side becomes
( y m x + y n x ) ( y m x y + n x ) = ( m n ) ( 2 y ( m + n ) x ) x
and the right hand side is
( m y m n x + n y m n x ) ( m y m n x n y + m n x ) = ( m n ) ( ( m + n ) y 2 m n x ) y
Since m n, we can factor out m n on both sides, getting
2 x y + ( m + n ) x 2 = ( m + n ) y 2 2 m n x y
that can be written
( m + n ) x 2 2 ( 1 m n ) x y ( m + n ) y 2 = 0
If you consider the equation b y 2 + 2 h x y + a x 2 = 0 in the unknown y, you can see that m and n are the roots of it (when b 0). Thus m + n = 2 h / b and m n = a / b, so you can rewrite the above equation in the form
2 h b x 2 2 ( 1 a b ) x y 2 h b y 2 = 0
which is
h x 2 ( a b ) x y h y 2 = 0
Note that it can't be both h = 0 and a = b 0, because in this case the original equations would be x 2 + y 2 = 0 (the isotropic lines, if you consider the complex plane).

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