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Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Derive the Equation of a Parabola

HSG.GPE.A.2 — Lesson 1 of 2

In this lesson:

  • Define a parabola from its geometric property
  • Derive step by step
  • Identify focus, directrix, and vertex from an equation
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Define a parabola: the set of all points equidistant from a fixed point and a fixed line
  2. Derive the equation from the geometric definition
  3. Identify the focus, directrix, and vertex from a given equation
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

What Geometrically Defines a Parabola?

You've graphed and — but what makes a curve a parabola?

It's not the equation — the equation is a consequence of the geometry.

A parabola is defined by a condition involving two geometric objects:

  • A fixed point called the focus
  • A fixed line called the directrix
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

The Geometric Definition

A parabola is the set of all points with

Term Meaning
Focus A fixed point inside the curve
Directrix A fixed line on the other side of the vertex
Vertex On the parabola; midpoint between focus and directrix
Focal length Distance from vertex to focus (= vertex to directrix)
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

The Setup: Focus, Directrix, Vertex

Coordinate plane with parabola opening upward, vertex at origin, focus F(0,p) above in dark red, directrix y=−p as dashed dark blue line, point P(x,y) on curve with equal distance markers d_F to focus and d_D to directrix labeled

Focus · Directrix · Vertex

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Equidistance Property in Action

For any point on the parabola:

Verify 3 points with , focus , directrix :

Point Equal?
— vertex
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Why Vertex at the Origin?

Strategic placement creates maximum cancellation in the algebra ahead.

  • Vertex at , focus at , directrix
  • Focus and directrix are each distance from the vertex — symmetric about the -axis
  • Focal length : larger → wider parabola; smaller → narrower parabola
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Check-In: Vertex Distance

Given: vertex , focus , directrix

What is the perpendicular distance from the vertex to the directrix?

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

From Geometry to Algebra

The parabola is defined by a distance condition — now we turn it into an equation.

The derivation plan:

  1. Take a generic point
  2. Write using the distance formula
  3. Write as the perpendicular distance to a line
  4. Set — the definition
  5. Expand and simplify to find the equation
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Distance to the Focus

Focus , generic point :

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Distance to the Directrix

⚠️ M1: This is the perpendicular distance to a line, not point-to-point.
Distance from to the line is .

For points above the directrix, , so .

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Steps 1–2: Set Equal and Square

⚠️ M2: — the middle term is required.

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Steps 3–4: Expand and Cancel

Algebraic cascade showing expansion of (y−p)² as y²−2py+p² on the left and (y+p)² as y²+2py+p² on the right, y² and p² terms highlighted in orange with strikethrough for cancellation, surviving terms in black, result x²=4py boxed in dark green

and cancel from both sides — leaving

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

The Result: Standard Form

Component Location Connection to
Vertex Origin — our setup
Focus y-coordinate equals
Directrix y-value equals
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Verification: , Point

Equation: · Focus: · Directrix:

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Vertex vs. Focus: A Critical Distinction

Location On the parabola?
Vertex Yes — turning point of the curve
Focus No — interior reference point
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

The Complete Picture:

Parabola y=x²/8 on coordinate axes, focus at (0,2) labeled in red, directrix y=−2 as dashed blue line, verification point (4,2) in green with dashed red line to focus and solid blue line down to directrix, both labeled d=4, confirmation box showing dF = dD = 4

  • Focus and directrix are each from the vertex
  • For every point on this curve:
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Guided Practice:

Given: vertex at origin, opening upward, focal length

Write the equation. State the focus and directrix.

Use and , directrix .

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Guided Practice: Answer

Focus: · Directrix:

Verify: vertex is distance from both. ✓

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Practice Set

1. The equation — find , state focus and directrix.

2. Focus , vertex at origin — write the equation.

3. Parabola , focal length — verify that is on the curve and satisfies equidistance.

Pause and try before advancing.

Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

Key Results and Watch-Outs

⚠️ Mistake Fix
M1 Distance to directrix via distance formula Perpendicular to : use
M2
M3 Vertex at Vertex on curve; focus inside
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2
Derive the Equation of a Parabola | Lesson 1 of 2

What's Next: Lesson 2 of 2

Orientations and Applications

  • Four orientations: up, down, left, right — the full picture
  • Reference table: read focus and directrix from any standard form instantly
  • Vertex form: every has a hidden focus and directrix
  • Real-world: satellite dishes, headlights, solar collectors
Grade 10 Geometry | HSG.GPE.A.2