Orthogonal trajectories of a given
pencil of curves are curves which intersect all given curves orthogonally. For example, the orthogonal trajectories of a pencil of
confocal ellipses are the confocal
hyperbolas with the same foci. For Cassini ovals one has: • The orthogonal trajectories of the Cassini curves with foci P_1, P_2 are the
equilateral hyperbolas containing P_1, P_2 with the same center as the Cassini ovals (see picture).
Proof: For simplicity one chooses P_1 = (1,0),\, P_2 = (-1,0). :The Cassini ovals have the equation f(x,y) = (x^2+y^2)^2 - 2(x^2-y^2) + 1 - b^4 = 0. :The
equilateral hyperbolas (their
asymptotes are rectangular) containing (1, 0), (-1, 0) with center (0, 0) can be described by the equation x^2 - y^2 - \lambda x y - 1 = 0,\ \ \ \lambda \in \R. These conic sections have no points with the
y-axis in common and intersect the
x-axis at (\pm 1, 0). Their
discriminants show that these curves are hyperbolas. A more detailed investigation reveals that the hyperbolas are rectangular. In order to get normals, which are independent from parameter \lambda the following implicit representation is more convenient g(x,y) = \frac{x^2 - y^2 -1}{xy} - \lambda = \frac{x}{y} - \frac{y}{x} - \frac{1}{xy} - \lambda = 0 \; . A simple calculation shows that \operatorname{grad}f(x,y) \cdot \operatorname{grad}g(x,y) = 0 for all (x,y),\, x \ne 0 \ne y. Hence the Cassini ovals and the hyperbolas intersect orthogonally.
Remark: The image depicting the Cassini ovals and the hyperbolas looks like the
equipotential curves of two equal
point charges together with the lines of the generated
electrical field. But for the potential of two equal point charges one has 1/|PP_1| + 1/|PP_2| = \text{constant}. (See
Implicit curve.) Instead these curves actually correspond to the (plane sections of) equipotential sets of two infinite wires with equal constant line
charge density, or alternatively, to the level sets of the sums of the
Green’s functions for the Laplacian in two dimensions centered at the foci. The single-loop and double loop Cassini curves can be represented as the orthogonal trajectories of each other when each family is coaxal but not confocal. If the single-loops are described by (x^2+y^2)-1=axy then the foci are variable on the axis y=x if a>0, y=-x if a; if the double-loops are described by (x^2+y^2)+1=b(x^2-y^2) then the axes are, respectively, y=0 and x=0. Each curve, up to similarity, appears twice in the image, which now resembles the field lines and potential curves for four equal point charges, located at (\pm1,0) and (0,\pm1). Further, the portion of this image in the
upper half-plane depicts the following situation: The double-loops are a reduced set of congruence classes for the central Steiner conics in the hyperbolic plane produced by direct collineations; and each single-loop is the locus of points P such that the angle OPQ is constant, where O=(0,1) and Q is the foot of the perpendicular through P on the line described by x^2+y^2=1. ==Examples==