Learning Objectives
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
- Write the equation of a parabola for all four orientations
- Identify focus, directrix, and direction from any standard-form equation
- Connect vertex form to geometric form using
- Find the focus and directrix of any quadratic function
Four Directions, One Definition
The equidistance condition works in any orientation.
The direction the parabola opens depends on where the focus is relative to the directrix:
- Focus above a horizontal directrix → opens up
- Focus below a horizontal directrix → opens down
- Focus right of a vertical directrix → opens right
- Focus left of a vertical directrix → opens left
All Four Orientations at a Glance
Downward Case: Reflection Argument
| Upward | Downward | |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | ||
| Directrix | ||
| Equation |
Horizontal Case:
Rightward: Focus
Leftward: Focus
All Four Orientations: Reference Table
| Opens | Focus | Directrix | Equation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up | |||
| Down | |||
| Right | |||
| Left |
Worked Example 1: ID from Equation
| Component | Value |
|---|---|
| Vertex | |
| Focus | |
| Directrix |
Given:
Worked Example 2: ID from Equation
| Component | Value |
|---|---|
| Vertex | |
| Focus | |
| Directrix |
Given:
Worked Example 3: Write from Focus and Directrix
Focus on
Result:
Check-In: Mixed Orientations
A. Given
- What direction does the parabola open?
- Find the focus and directrix.
B. A parabola with vertex at the origin has focus
- Write its equation.
Pause and try both before the next slide.
Check-In: Answers
A.
Focus
B. Focus
From Standard to General
Standard form (vertex at origin) → General form (vertex at any point
The shift: replace
This moves the vertex from
- Focus offsets from vertex by
— in the opening direction - Directrix offsets from vertex by
— in the opposite direction
General Case: Vertex at
| Component | Location (upward) |
|---|---|
| Vertex | |
| Focus | |
| Directrix |
The Relationship
Key formula:
Worked Example 1: Vertex Form → Focus/Directrix
Opens upward. Focus:
Worked Example 2: From Standard Form
Vertex
Focus:
Application: Satellite Dish Receiver Placement
2 m wide, 0.5 m deep parabolic dish — where does the receiver go?
- Model: vertex at origin, rim at
; use - Substitute
: m - Place receiver 0.5 m above the vertex — at the focus
- Parallel rays reflect to the focus; all signals converge there
Guided Practice
Given:
Find: vertex,
, direction, focus, and directrix.
Use
Guided Practice: Answer
Vertex:
Focus:
Practice Set
1.
2. Vertex at origin, directrix
3.
4.
Pause and try before advancing.
Key Results and Watch-Outs
| Mistake | Fix | |
|---|---|---|
| M4 | " |
Check the sign: |
| M5 | ||
| M3 | Focus at |
Focus at |
What's Next: HSG.GPE.A.3
Ellipses and Hyperbolas
- Ellipse: sum of distances to two foci = constant →
- Hyperbola: difference of distances to two foci = constant
- Same strategy: geometric condition → distance formula → simplify
Circle ✓ · Parabola ✓ · Ellipse / Hyperbola →