![Parametric space curve](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9kL2QwL0J1dHRlcmZseV90cmFuc2NlbmRlbnRhbF9jdXJ2ZS5zdmcvMTYwMHB4LUJ1dHRlcmZseV90cmFuc2NlbmRlbnRhbF9jdXJ2ZS5zdmcucG5n.png )
In mathematics, a parametric equation expresses several quantities, such as the coordinates of a point, as functions of one or several variables called parameters.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWtMMlF3TDBKMWRIUmxjbVpzZVY5MGNtRnVjMk5sYm1SbGJuUmhiRjlqZFhKMlpTNXpkbWN2TWpJd2NIZ3RRblYwZEdWeVpteDVYM1J5WVc1elkyVnVaR1Z1ZEdGc1gyTjFjblpsTG5OMlp5NXdibWM9LnBuZw==.png)
In the case of a single parameter, parametric equations are commonly used to express the trajectory of a moving point, in which case, the parameter is often, but not necessarily, time, and the point describes a curve, called a parametric curve. In the case of two parameters, the point describes a surface, called a parametric surface. In all cases, the equations are collectively called a parametric representation, or parametric system, or parameterization (alternatively spelled as parametrisation) of the object.
For example, the equations form a parametric representation of the unit circle, where t is the parameter: A point (x, y) is on the unit circle if and only if there is a value of t such that these two equations generate that point. Sometimes the parametric equations for the individual scalar output variables are combined into a single parametric equation in vectors:
Parametric representations are generally nonunique (see the "Examples in two dimensions" section below), so the same quantities may be expressed by a number of different parameterizations.
In addition to curves and surfaces, parametric equations can describe manifolds and algebraic varieties of higher dimension, with the number of parameters being equal to the dimension of the manifold or variety, and the number of equations being equal to the dimension of the space in which the manifold or variety is considered (for curves the dimension is one and one parameter is used, for surfaces dimension two and two parameters, etc.).
Parametric equations are commonly used in kinematics, where the trajectory of an object is represented by equations depending on time as the parameter. Because of this application, a single parameter is often labeled t; however, parameters can represent other physical quantities (such as geometric variables) or can be selected arbitrarily for convenience. Parameterizations are non-unique; more than one set of parametric equations can specify the same curve.
Implicitization
Converting a set of parametric equations to a single implicit equation involves eliminating the variable t from the simultaneous equations This process is called implicitization. If one of these equations can be solved for t, the expression obtained can be substituted into the other equation to obtain an equation involving x and y only: Solving
to obtain
and using this in
gives the explicit equation
while more complicated cases will give an implicit equation of the form
If the parametrization is given by rational functions
where p, q, and r are set-wise coprime polynomials, a resultant computation allows one to implicitize. More precisely, the implicit equation is the resultant with respect to t of xr(t) – p(t) and yr(t) – q(t).
In higher dimensions (either more than two coordinates or more than one parameter), the implicitization of rational parametric equations may by done with Gröbner basis computation; see Gröbner basis § Implicitization in higher dimension.
To take the example of the circle of radius a, the parametric equations
can be implicitized in terms of x and y by way of the Pythagorean trigonometric identity. With
and
we get
and thus
which is the standard equation of a circle centered at the origin.
Parametric plane curves
Parabola
The simplest equation for a parabola,
can be (trivially) parameterized by using a free parameter t, and setting
Explicit equations
More generally, any curve given by an explicit equation
can be (trivially) parameterized by using a free parameter t, and setting
Circle
A more sophisticated example is the following. Consider the unit circle which is described by the ordinary (Cartesian) equation
This equation can be parameterized as follows:
With the Cartesian equation it is easier to check whether a point lies on the circle or not. With the parametric version it is easier to obtain points on a plot.
In some contexts, parametric equations involving only rational functions (that is fractions of two polynomials) are preferred, if they exist. In the case of the circle, such a rational parameterization is
With this pair of parametric equations, the point (−1, 0) is not represented by a real value of t, but by the limit of x and y when t tends to infinity.
Ellipse
An ellipse in canonical position (center at origin, major axis along the x-axis) with semi-axes a and b can be represented parametrically as
An ellipse in general position can be expressed as
as the parameter t varies from 0 to 2π. Here (Xc , Yc) is the center of the ellipse, and φ is the angle between the x-axis and the major axis of the ellipse.
Both parameterizations may be made rational by using the tangent half-angle formula and setting
Lissajous curve
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHhMekZtTDB4cGMzTmhhbTkxYzE5amRYSjJaVjh6WW5reUxuTjJaeTh5TWpCd2VDMU1hWE56WVdwdmRYTmZZM1Z5ZG1WZk0ySjVNaTV6ZG1jdWNHNW4ucG5n.png)
A Lissajous curve is similar to an ellipse, but the x and y sinusoids are not in phase. In canonical position, a Lissajous curve is given by where kx and ky are constants describing the number of lobes of the figure.
Hyperbola
An east-west opening hyperbola can be represented parametrically by
or, rationally
A north-south opening hyperbola can be represented parametrically as
or, rationally
In all these formulae (h , k) are the center coordinates of the hyperbola, a is the length of the semi-major axis, and b is the length of the semi-minor axis. Note that in the rational forms of these formulae, the points (−a , 0) and (0 , −a), respectively, are not represented by a real value of t, but are the limit of x and y as t tends to infinity.
Hypotrochoid
A hypotrochoid is a curve traced by a point attached to a circle of radius r rolling around the inside of a fixed circle of radius R, where the point is at a distance d from the center of the interior circle.
- A hypotrochoid for which r = d
- A hypotrochoid for which R = 5, r = 3, d = 5
The parametric equations for the hypotrochoids are:
Some examples:
- R = 6 r = 4 d = 1
- R = 7 r = 4 d = 1
- R = 8 r = 3 d = 2
- R = 7 r = 4 d = 2
- R = 15 r = 14 d = 1
Parametric space curves
Helix
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJoTDFCaGNtRnRaWFJ5YVdOZlNHVnNhWGd1Y0c1bkx6TXdNSEI0TFZCaGNtRnRaWFJ5YVdOZlNHVnNhWGd1Y0c1bi5wbmc=.png)
Parametric equations are convenient for describing curves in higher-dimensional spaces. For example:
describes a three-dimensional curve, the helix, with a radius of a and rising by 2πb units per turn. The equations are identical in the plane to those for a circle. Such expressions as the one above are commonly written as
where r is a three-dimensional vector.
Parametric surfaces
A torus with major radius R and minor radius r may be defined parametrically as
where the two parameters t and u both vary between 0 and 2π.
- R = 2, r = 1/2
As u varies from 0 to 2π the point on the surface moves about a short circle passing through the hole in the torus. As t varies from 0 to 2π the point on the surface moves about a long circle around the hole in the torus.
Straight line
The parametric equation of the line through the point and parallel to the vector
is
Applications
Kinematics
In kinematics, objects' paths through space are commonly described as parametric curves, with each spatial coordinate depending explicitly on an independent parameter (usually time). Used in this way, the set of parametric equations for the object's coordinates collectively constitute a vector-valued function for position. Such parametric curves can then be integrated and differentiated termwise. Thus, if a particle's position is described parametrically as
then its velocity can be found as
and its acceleration as
Computer-aided design
Another important use of parametric equations is in the field of computer-aided design (CAD). For example, consider the following three representations, all of which are commonly used to describe planar curves.
Type | Form | Example | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Explicit | Line | ||
Implicit | Circle | ||
Parametric | Line | ||
Circle |
Each representation has advantages and drawbacks for CAD applications.
The explicit representation may be very complicated, or even may not exist. Moreover, it does not behave well under geometric transformations, and in particular under rotations. On the other hand, as a parametric equation and an implicit equation may easily be deduced from an explicit representation, when a simple explicit representation exists, it has the advantages of both other representations.
Implicit representations may make it difficult to generate points on the curve, and even to decide whether there are real points. On the other hand, they are well suited for deciding whether a given point is on a curve, or whether it is inside or outside of a closed curve.
Such decisions may be difficult with a parametric representation, but parametric representations are best suited for generating points on a curve, and for plotting it.
Integer geometry
Numerous problems in integer geometry can be solved using parametric equations. A classical such solution is Euclid's parametrization of right triangles such that the lengths of their sides a, b and their hypotenuse c are coprime integers. As a and b are not both even (otherwise a, b and c would not be coprime), one may exchange them to have a even, and the parameterization is then
where the parameters m and n are positive coprime integers that are not both odd.
By multiplying a, b and c by an arbitrary positive integer, one gets a parametrization of all right triangles whose three sides have integer lengths.
Underdetermined linear systems
A system of m linear equations in n unknowns is underdetermined if it has more than one solution. This occurs when the matrix of the system and its augmented matrix have the same rank r and r < n. In this case, one can select n − r unknowns as parameters and represent all solutions as a parametric equation where all unknowns are expressed as linear combinations of the selected ones. That is, if the unknowns are one can reorder them for expressing the solutions as
Such a parametric equation is called a parametric form of the solution of the system.
The standard method for computing a parametric form of the solution is to use Gaussian elimination for computing a reduced row echelon form of the augmented matrix. Then the unknowns that can be used as parameters are the ones that correspond to columns not containing any leading entry (that is the left most non zero entry in a row or the matrix), and the parametric form can be straightforwardly deduced.
See also
- Curve
- Parametric estimating
- Position vector
- Vector-valued function
- Parametrization by arc length
- Parametric derivative
Notes
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Parametric Equations". MathWorld.
- Kreyszig, Erwin (1972). Advanced Engineering Mathematics (3rd ed.). New York: Wiley. pp. 291, 342. ISBN 0-471-50728-8.
- Burden, Richard L.; Faires, J. Douglas (1993). Numerical Analysis (5th ed.). Boston: Brookes/Cole. p. 149. ISBN 0-534-93219-3.
- Thomas, George B.; Finney, Ross L. (1979). Calculus and Analytic Geometry (fifth ed.). Addison-Wesley. p. 91.
- Nykamp, Duane. "Plane parametrization example". mathinsight.org. Retrieved 2017-04-14.
- Spitzbart, Abraham (1975). Calculus with Analytic Geometry. Gleview, IL: Scott, Foresman and Company. ISBN 0-673-07907-4. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
- Calculus: Single and Multivariable. John Wiley. 2012-10-29. p. 919. ISBN 9780470888612. OCLC 828768012.
- Stewart, James (2003). Calculus (5th ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson Learning, Inc. pp. 687–689. ISBN 0-534-39339-X.
- Shah, Jami J.; Martti Mantyla (1995). Parametric and feature-based CAD/CAM: concepts, techniques, and applications. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 29–31. ISBN 0-471-00214-3.
- Anton, Howard; Rorres, Chris (2014) [1973]. "1.2 Gaussian Elimination". Elementary Linear Algebra (11th ed.). Wiley. pp. 11–24.
External links
- Web application to draw parametric curves on the plane
In mathematics a parametric equation expresses several quantities such as the coordinates of a point as functions of one or several variables called parameters The butterfly curve can be defined by parametric equations of x and y In the case of a single parameter parametric equations are commonly used to express the trajectory of a moving point in which case the parameter is often but not necessarily time and the point describes a curve called a parametric curve In the case of two parameters the point describes a surface called a parametric surface In all cases the equations are collectively called a parametric representation or parametric system or parameterization alternatively spelled as parametrisation of the object For example the equations x cos ty sin t displaystyle begin aligned x amp cos t y amp sin t end aligned form a parametric representation of the unit circle where t is the parameter A point x y is on the unit circle if and only if there is a value of t such that these two equations generate that point Sometimes the parametric equations for the individual scalar output variables are combined into a single parametric equation in vectors x y cos t sin t displaystyle x y cos t sin t Parametric representations are generally nonunique see the Examples in two dimensions section below so the same quantities may be expressed by a number of different parameterizations In addition to curves and surfaces parametric equations can describe manifolds and algebraic varieties of higher dimension with the number of parameters being equal to the dimension of the manifold or variety and the number of equations being equal to the dimension of the space in which the manifold or variety is considered for curves the dimension is one and one parameter is used for surfaces dimension two and two parameters etc Parametric equations are commonly used in kinematics where the trajectory of an object is represented by equations depending on time as the parameter Because of this application a single parameter is often labeled t however parameters can represent other physical quantities such as geometric variables or can be selected arbitrarily for convenience Parameterizations are non unique more than one set of parametric equations can specify the same curve ImplicitizationConverting a set of parametric equations to a single implicit equation involves eliminating the variable t from the simultaneous equations x f t y g t displaystyle x f t y g t This process is called implicitization If one of these equations can be solved for t the expression obtained can be substituted into the other equation to obtain an equation involving x and y only Solving y g t displaystyle y g t to obtain t g 1 y displaystyle t g 1 y and using this in x f t displaystyle x f t gives the explicit equation x f g 1 y displaystyle x f g 1 y while more complicated cases will give an implicit equation of the form h x y 0 displaystyle h x y 0 If the parametrization is given by rational functions x p t r t y q t r t displaystyle x frac p t r t qquad y frac q t r t where p q and r are set wise coprime polynomials a resultant computation allows one to implicitize More precisely the implicit equation is the resultant with respect to t of xr t p t and yr t q t In higher dimensions either more than two coordinates or more than one parameter the implicitization of rational parametric equations may by done with Grobner basis computation see Grobner basis Implicitization in higher dimension To take the example of the circle of radius a the parametric equations x acos t y asin t displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cos t y amp a sin t end aligned can be implicitized in terms of x and y by way of the Pythagorean trigonometric identity With xa cos t ya sin t displaystyle begin aligned frac x a amp cos t frac y a amp sin t end aligned and cos t 2 sin t 2 1 displaystyle cos t 2 sin t 2 1 we get xa 2 ya 2 1 displaystyle left frac x a right 2 left frac y a right 2 1 and thus x2 y2 a2 displaystyle x 2 y 2 a 2 which is the standard equation of a circle centered at the origin Parametric plane curvesParabola The simplest equation for a parabola y x2 displaystyle y x 2 can be trivially parameterized by using a free parameter t and setting x t y t2for lt t lt displaystyle x t y t 2 quad mathrm for infty lt t lt infty Explicit equations More generally any curve given by an explicit equation y f x displaystyle y f x can be trivially parameterized by using a free parameter t and setting x t y f t for lt t lt displaystyle x t y f t quad mathrm for infty lt t lt infty Circle A more sophisticated example is the following Consider the unit circle which is described by the ordinary Cartesian equation x2 y2 1 displaystyle x 2 y 2 1 This equation can be parameterized as follows x y cos t sin t for 0 t lt 2p displaystyle x y cos t sin t quad mathrm for 0 leq t lt 2 pi With the Cartesian equation it is easier to check whether a point lies on the circle or not With the parametric version it is easier to obtain points on a plot In some contexts parametric equations involving only rational functions that is fractions of two polynomials are preferred if they exist In the case of the circle such a rational parameterization is x 1 t21 t2y 2t1 t2 displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac 1 t 2 1 t 2 y amp frac 2t 1 t 2 end aligned With this pair of parametric equations the point 1 0 is not represented by a real value of t but by the limit of x and y when t tends to infinity Ellipse An ellipse in canonical position center at origin major axis along the x axis with semi axes a and b can be represented parametrically as x acos ty bsin t displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cos t y amp b sin t end aligned An ellipse in general position can be expressed as x Xc acos tcos f bsin tsin fy Yc acos tsin f bsin tcos f displaystyle begin alignedat 4 x amp amp X mathrm c amp a cos t cos varphi amp amp b sin t sin varphi y amp amp Y mathrm c amp a cos t sin varphi amp amp b sin t cos varphi end alignedat as the parameter t varies from 0 to 2p Here Xc Yc is the center of the ellipse and f is the angle between the x axis and the major axis of the ellipse Both parameterizations may be made rational by using the tangent half angle formula and setting tan t2 u textstyle tan frac t 2 u Lissajous curve A Lissajous curve where kx 3 and ky 2 A Lissajous curve is similar to an ellipse but the x and y sinusoids are not in phase In canonical position a Lissajous curve is given by x acos kxt y bsin kyt displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cos k x t y amp b sin k y t end aligned where kx and ky are constants describing the number of lobes of the figure Hyperbola An east west opening hyperbola can be represented parametrically by x asec t hy btan t k displaystyle begin aligned x amp a sec t h y amp b tan t k end aligned or rationally x a1 t21 t2 hy b2t1 t2 k displaystyle begin aligned x amp a frac 1 t 2 1 t 2 h y amp b frac 2t 1 t 2 k end aligned A north south opening hyperbola can be represented parametrically as x btan t hy asec t k displaystyle begin aligned x amp b tan t h y amp a sec t k end aligned or rationally x b2t1 t2 hy a1 t21 t2 k displaystyle begin aligned x amp b frac 2t 1 t 2 h y amp a frac 1 t 2 1 t 2 k end aligned In all these formulae h k are the center coordinates of the hyperbola a is the length of the semi major axis and b is the length of the semi minor axis Note that in the rational forms of these formulae the points a 0 and 0 a respectively are not represented by a real value of t but are the limit of x and y as t tends to infinity Hypotrochoid A hypotrochoid is a curve traced by a point attached to a circle of radius r rolling around the inside of a fixed circle of radius R where the point is at a distance d from the center of the interior circle A hypotrochoid for which r d A hypotrochoid for which R 5 r 3 d 5 The parametric equations for the hypotrochoids are x 8 R r cos 8 dcos R rr8 y 8 R r sin 8 dsin R rr8 displaystyle begin aligned x theta amp R r cos theta d cos left R r over r theta right y theta amp R r sin theta d sin left R r over r theta right end aligned Some examples R 6 r 4 d 1 R 7 r 4 d 1 R 8 r 3 d 2 R 7 r 4 d 2 R 15 r 14 d 1Parametric space curves source source source source source source source source Animated Parametric helixHelix Parametric helix Parametric equations are convenient for describing curves in higher dimensional spaces For example x acos t y asin t z bt displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cos t y amp a sin t z amp bt end aligned describes a three dimensional curve the helix with a radius of a and rising by 2p b units per turn The equations are identical in the plane to those for a circle Such expressions as the one above are commonly written as r t x t y t z t acos t asin t bt displaystyle begin aligned mathbf r t amp x t y t z t amp a cos t a sin t bt end aligned where r is a three dimensional vector Parametric surfaces A torus with major radius R and minor radius r may be defined parametrically as x cos t R rcos u y sin t R rcos u z rsin u displaystyle begin aligned x amp cos t left R r cos u right y amp sin t left R r cos u right z amp r sin u end aligned where the two parameters t and u both vary between 0 and 2p R 2 r 1 2 As u varies from 0 to 2p the point on the surface moves about a short circle passing through the hole in the torus As t varies from 0 to 2p the point on the surface moves about a long circle around the hole in the torus Straight line The parametric equation of the line through the point x0 y0 z0 displaystyle left x 0 y 0 z 0 right and parallel to the vector ai bj ck displaystyle a hat mathbf i b hat mathbf j c hat mathbf k is x x0 aty y0 btz z0 ct displaystyle begin aligned x amp x 0 at y amp y 0 bt z amp z 0 ct end aligned ApplicationsKinematics In kinematics objects paths through space are commonly described as parametric curves with each spatial coordinate depending explicitly on an independent parameter usually time Used in this way the set of parametric equations for the object s coordinates collectively constitute a vector valued function for position Such parametric curves can then be integrated and differentiated termwise Thus if a particle s position is described parametrically as r t x t y t z t displaystyle mathbf r t x t y t z t then its velocity can be found as v t r t x t y t z t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf v t amp mathbf r t amp x t y t z t end aligned and its acceleration as a t v t r t x t y t z t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a t amp mathbf v t mathbf r t amp x t y t z t end aligned Computer aided design Another important use of parametric equations is in the field of computer aided design CAD For example consider the following three representations all of which are commonly used to describe planar curves Type Form Example DescriptionExplicit y f x displaystyle y f x y mx b displaystyle y mx b LineImplicit f x y 0 displaystyle f x y 0 x a 2 y b 2 r2 displaystyle left x a right 2 left y b right 2 r 2 CircleParametric x g t w t displaystyle x frac g t w t y h t w t displaystyle y frac h t w t x a0 a1t displaystyle x a 0 a 1 t y b0 b1t displaystyle y b 0 b 1 t Linex a rcos t displaystyle x a r cos t y b rsin t displaystyle y b r sin t Circle Each representation has advantages and drawbacks for CAD applications The explicit representation may be very complicated or even may not exist Moreover it does not behave well under geometric transformations and in particular under rotations On the other hand as a parametric equation and an implicit equation may easily be deduced from an explicit representation when a simple explicit representation exists it has the advantages of both other representations Implicit representations may make it difficult to generate points on the curve and even to decide whether there are real points On the other hand they are well suited for deciding whether a given point is on a curve or whether it is inside or outside of a closed curve Such decisions may be difficult with a parametric representation but parametric representations are best suited for generating points on a curve and for plotting it Integer geometry Numerous problems in integer geometry can be solved using parametric equations A classical such solution is Euclid s parametrization of right triangles such that the lengths of their sides a b and their hypotenuse c are coprime integers As a and b are not both even otherwise a b and c would not be coprime one may exchange them to have a even and the parameterization is then a 2mnb m2 n2c m2 n2 displaystyle begin aligned a amp 2mn b amp m 2 n 2 c amp m 2 n 2 end aligned where the parameters m and n are positive coprime integers that are not both odd By multiplying a b and c by an arbitrary positive integer one gets a parametrization of all right triangles whose three sides have integer lengths Underdetermined linear systemsA system of m linear equations in n unknowns is underdetermined if it has more than one solution This occurs when the matrix of the system and its augmented matrix have the same rank r and r lt n In this case one can select n r unknowns as parameters and represent all solutions as a parametric equation where all unknowns are expressed as linear combinations of the selected ones That is if the unknowns are x1 xn displaystyle x 1 ldots x n one can reorder them for expressing the solutions as x1 b1 j r 1na1 jxj xr br j r 1nar jxjxr 1 xr 1 xn xn displaystyle begin aligned x 1 amp beta 1 sum j r 1 n alpha 1 j x j vdots x r amp beta r sum j r 1 n alpha r j x j x r 1 amp x r 1 vdots x n amp x n end aligned Such a parametric equation is called a parametric form of the solution of the system The standard method for computing a parametric form of the solution is to use Gaussian elimination for computing a reduced row echelon form of the augmented matrix Then the unknowns that can be used as parameters are the ones that correspond to columns not containing any leading entry that is the left most non zero entry in a row or the matrix and the parametric form can be straightforwardly deduced See alsoCurve Parametric estimating Position vector Vector valued function Parametrization by arc length Parametric derivativeNotesWeisstein Eric W Parametric Equations MathWorld Kreyszig Erwin 1972 Advanced Engineering Mathematics 3rd ed New York Wiley pp 291 342 ISBN 0 471 50728 8 Burden Richard L Faires J Douglas 1993 Numerical Analysis 5th ed Boston Brookes Cole p 149 ISBN 0 534 93219 3 Thomas George B Finney Ross L 1979 Calculus and Analytic Geometry fifth ed Addison Wesley p 91 Nykamp Duane Plane parametrization example mathinsight org Retrieved 2017 04 14 Spitzbart Abraham 1975 Calculus with Analytic Geometry Gleview IL Scott Foresman and Company ISBN 0 673 07907 4 Retrieved August 30 2015 Calculus Single and Multivariable John Wiley 2012 10 29 p 919 ISBN 9780470888612 OCLC 828768012 Stewart James 2003 Calculus 5th ed Belmont CA Thomson Learning Inc pp 687 689 ISBN 0 534 39339 X Shah Jami J Martti Mantyla 1995 Parametric and feature based CAD CAM concepts techniques and applications New York NY John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 29 31 ISBN 0 471 00214 3 Anton Howard Rorres Chris 2014 1973 1 2 Gaussian Elimination Elementary Linear Algebra 11th ed Wiley pp 11 24 External linksWeb application to draw parametric curves on the plane