y=b*sqr(1-(i*i/a*a))
Peter, this equation is equivalent to what we have here.
Again, I believe strectched-circle is an ellipse.
In order to proof it, we must first define what is an ellipse. The foolowing definition is quoted fron Answer.com:
A plane curve, especially:
1. A conic section whose plane is not parallel to the axis, base, or generatrix of the intersected cone.
2. The locus of points for which the sum of the distances from each point to two fixed points is equal.
An ellipse may be uniformly stretched along any axis, in or out of the plane of the ellipse, and it will still be an ellipse. The stretched ellipse will have different properties (perhaps changed eccentricity and semi-major axis length, for instance), but it will still be an ellipse (or a degenerate ellipse: a circle or a line). Similarly, any oblique projection onto a plane results in a conic section. If the projection is a closed curve on the plane, then the curve is an ellipse or a degenerate ellipse.
Howard Phua
Win 10, Archicad 19 INT