In geometry, the kappa curve or Gutschoven's curve is a two-dimensional algebraic curve resembling the Greek letterϰ (kappa). The kappa curve was first studied by around 1662. In the history of mathematics, it is remembered as one of the first examples of Isaac Barrow's application of rudimentary calculus methods to determine the tangent of a curve. Isaac Newton and Johann Bernoulli continued the studies of this curve subsequently.
The tangent lines of the kappa curve can also be determined geometrically using differentials and the elementary rules of infinitesimal arithmetic. Suppose x and y are variables, while a is taken to be a constant. From the definition of the kappa curve,
Now, an infinitesimal change in our location must also change the value of the left hand side, so
Distributing the differential and applying appropriate rules,
Derivative[]
If we use the modern concept of a functional relationship y(x) and apply implicit differentiation, the slope of a tangent line to the kappa curve at a point (x,y) is: