Find the points on the surface y² = 4xz that are closest to the origin

To find the points on the surface defined by the equation y² = 4xz that are closest to the origin (0, 0, 0), we need to minimize the distance from a point (x, y, z) on the surface to the origin.

The distance D from the origin to a point (x, y, z) is given by:

D = √(x² + y² + z²)

However, for minimization purposes, we can minimize the square of the distance to avoid dealing with the square root:

D² = x² + y² + z²

Now substituting y² = 4xz into the distance formula allows us to express everything in terms of x and z:

D² = x² + 4xz + z²

This is a function of two variables, D²(x, z). To find the minimum, we take the partial derivatives with respect to x and z and set them to zero.

First, we calculate the partial derivative with respect to x:

∂D²/∂x = 2x + 4z

Setting it to zero gives:

2x + 4z = 0 → x = -2z

Now, we calculate the partial derivative with respect to z:

∂D²/∂z = 4x + 2z

Setting this equal to zero gives:

4x + 2z = 0 → z = -2x

Now, we have two equations:

  • x = -2z
  • z = -2x

Substituting z = -2x into the first equation:

x = -2(-2x) → x = 4x

This leads us to realize that x must be zero:

4x = 0 → x = 0

Using x = 0 in one of our earlier relationships, we substitute back:

z = -2(0) = 0

y² = 4(0)z = 0 → y = 0

Thus, the only point on the surface y² = 4xz that is closest to the origin is:

(0, 0, 0)

To confirm, we can check that this point satisfies the original equation:

0² = 4(0)(0) → 0 = 0

Therefore, the point that is closest to the origin is indeed (0, 0, 0).

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