Eccentricity

Eccentricity: how much a conic section (a circle, ellipse, parabola or hyperbola)
varies from being circular.

A circle has an eccentricity of zero, so the eccentricity shows us how "un-circular" the curve is. Bigger eccentricities are less curved.

Nested conic sections: circle (e=0), ellipse (e=0.7), parabola (e=1), and hyperbola (e=2)

Different values of eccentricity make different curves:

Eccentricity is often shown as the letter e (don't confuse this with Euler's number "e", they are totally different)

Focus and Directrix

focus and directrix shown

We can define eccentricity as the ratio of distances from any point P on the curve to a fixed point (the focus) and a fixed line (the directrix):

eccentricity e = distance from P to Focusdistance from P to Directrix

This ratio is the same for every point on the curve.

Animation

Try the slider to see what happens:

images/eccentricity-graph.js

Calculating The Value

Circle showing center and radius For a circle, eccentricity is 0
Ellipse with semi-major axis a and semi-minor axis b labeled

For an ellipse, eccentricity is:

a2 − b2a
Parabola with focus and directrix shown For a parabola, eccentricity is 1
Hyperbola with semi-major axis a labeled

For a hyperbola, eccentricity is:

a2 + b2a

Example for an ellipse: if a = 5 and b = 4, then

52 − 425 = 25 − 165 = 95 = 35 = 0.6

Example for a hyperbola: if a = 3 and b = 4, then

32 + 423 = 9 + 163 = 253 = 53 ≈ 1.67