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It would appear that the Disk function, when asked to produce the sector of an ellipse between two angles treats those angles as Eccentric Anomalies (i.e. arguments to a parametric plot) rather than true central angles (i.e. arguments to a polar plot). The first part of my question asks whether this observation is correct?

Given that I want to construct a sector using the true central angles, I know that I can make use of the polar equation (r=(a*b)/Sqrt[(b Cos[θ])^2+(a Sin[θ])^2];), but this does not provide me Disk's ability to color the resultant sector. So, the second part of my question is, does Mathematica provide me a function for performing this filling operation?

I am aware of the Filling option to Plot. If it is, in fact, the preferred approach, can anyone provide an example of its use for doing elliptical sectors?

Thanks.

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1 Answer 1

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I think these functions do what you want. First the length from the centre of the ellipse to a point on its perimeter.

EllipsePolarRadius[t_, a_, b_] := a*b/Sqrt[(a Sin[t])^2 + (b Cos[t])^2]

Next a conversion from eccentric anomaly to central angle that works when input to Disk.

AngleConversionForDisk[t_, a_, b_] :=
   Which[
      0 <= t < Pi/2, ArcTan[a*Tan[t]/b],
      t == Pi/2, Pi/2,
      Pi/2 < t < 3 Pi/2, ArcTan[a*Tan[t]/b] + Pi,
      t == 3 Pi/2, 3 Pi/2,
      3 Pi/2 < t <= 2 Pi, ArcTan[a*Tan[t]/b] + 2 Pi]

And a Manipulate to illustrate the relationships.

Manipulate[
   Module[{a = 2, b = 4, u},
      u = AngleConversionForDisk[t, a, b];
      Graphics[{Thick,
         Circle[{0, b}, {a, b}],(* ellipse *)
         Cyan, Disk[{0, b}, {a, b}, {0, u}], (* ellipse sector *)
          (* t parameterization *)
         Black, Line[{{0, b}, {a Cos[t], b Sin[t]} + {0, b}}],
         (* u parameterization *)
         Red, Line[{{0, b}, EllipsePolarRadius[t, a, b]*{Cos[t], Sin[t]} + {0, b}}]
         }, Frame -> True, GridLines -> {Range[-a, a], Range[0, 2 b]},
         PlotLabel -> "Central Angle: " <> ToString[N[t]/Degree] <> " degrees"]],
   {{t, 0.2, "Central Angle"}, 0., 2.*Pi, Appearance -> "Labeled"}]

ellipse sector

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  • $\begingroup$ AngleConversionForDisk[] looks like it can be expressed better with two-argument arctangent. See this article by Glassner as well. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 8, 2015 at 3:12
  • $\begingroup$ This is exactly what I need. BTW, I am familiar with using the expansion factor a/b to transform a y coordinate from an ellipse to the circumscribed circle. But I am unfamiliar with its use in the context of ArcTan[a*Tan[t]/b]. Can you explain a bit how this works, or give me a pointer to a resource? Thanks. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 12, 2015 at 16:51
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks! The connection between the central angle and the eccentric anomaly is discussed, for example, here. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 14, 2015 at 15:09

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