This image shows a trifolium curve using its Cartesian equation.
The trifolium curve (also three-leafed clover curve, 3-petaled rose curve, and pâquerettenl:madeliefjede mélibée) is a type of quartic plane curve. The name comes from the Latin terms for 3-leaved, defining itself as a folium shape with 3 equally sized leaves.[1]
It is described as
By solving for y by substituting y2 and its square, the curve can be described by the following function(s):
Due to the separate ± symbols, it is possible to solve for 4 different answers at a given (positive) x-coordinate; 2 y-values per negative x-coordinate. One sees 2 resp. 1 pair(s) of solutions, mirroring points on the curve.
He defines the trifolium as having three leaves and having a triple point at the origin made up of 4 arcs. The trifolium is a sextic curve meaning that any line through the origin will have it pass through the curve again and through its complex conjugate twice.[5]
^de Longchamps, Gaston (1884). Cours de Mathématiques Spéciales: Geométrie Analytique à Deux Dimensions (in French). France: Nabu Press. ISBN9781145247291. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
^Cundy, Henry Martyn; Rollett, Arthur P. (2007). Mathematical models (3., repr ed.). St. Albans: Tarquin Publications. ISBN978-0906212202.