An ellipse is usually defined as the locus of points so that sum of the distances to the two foci is constant. But what are curves called which are defined as the locus of points so that the sum of the distances to three foci is constant? Trilipse? And what about $n$ foci? $n$-lipse? How do these curves look like? Is there any literature about them?
What are curves (generalized ellipses) with more than two focal points called and how do they look like?
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geometry
reference-request
terminology
plane-curves
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0This link is also interesting: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_conic#Multifocal_oval_curves – 2016-03-20
1 Answers
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These are called $k$-ellipses. Yes, there is a literature. Here is one 2007 reference, which can lead you to others: "Semidefinite Representation of the $k$-Ellipse," arXiv:math/0702005v1:
Caveat emptor: The Zariski closure of the 5-ellipse is an algebraic curve of degree 32(!). See their Fig.5:
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4[This French page](http://www.mathcurve.com/courbes2d/cayleyovale/cayleyovale.shtml) deals with a bunch of generalizations of Cayley ovals, which are the loci of a point whose distance from a given set of foci satisfy an algebraic relation. In general, if $n$ is the number of foci, then the degree of the underlying algebraic curve is $2^n$. – 2012-03-28