Quadrature Parabola
Quadrature Parabola
Quadrature Parabola
• Suspended
• Attached
• Equilibrium
• Center of gravity
2. The results
and
Proposition 17, 24: The area of a parabolic segment is 4/3 the area
of its inscribed triangle.
3. A modern secret:
If you prove these propositions for any single parabolic segment,
there is an argument that shows that you’ve done it for all.
Question 4.1. What is the basic diagram set up in the first paragraph
of each of these propositions?
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Question 4.3. Can you go through the proof of Propositions 14, and
15 using the above diagram as a special case? To begin to do this
concentrate on the following figures
• the rectangle KΠ
• the triangles ΣΠΓ, OΠΓ, and BΓ∆
• the segment BOΓ
(1) Show ( or rather, note) that
Question 4.4. Return to the basic diagram above3 and now trisect
B∆ at E and K, so that BE, EK, K∆ all have the same length. Draw
1In this very particular instance, of course, you can say more precisely what OΠΓ
and KΠ + ΣΠΓ are, as fractions of B∆Γ.
2i.e., the difference between the upper bound and the lower bound in the chain
of inequalities in (1) and (2) above; i.e., the inequalities that sandwich both BOΓ
and 31 B∆Γ
3BOΓ is the segment of a parabola bounded by the straight line BΓ, B∆ is
parallel to a diameter, and Γ∆ is tangent to the parabola at Γ.
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the straight lines EΓ, KΓ. Draw the two indicated lines parallel to the
diameter of the parabola4.
(1) Which quadrilaterals in this figure can you show have the same
area?
(2) How can you show this?
(3) Which triangles in this figure can you show have the same area?
(4) Where in Archimedes’ text is it demonstrated that they do have
the same area? How is it demonstrated?
(5) What role does it play in the proofs of these propositions?
(6) Proposition 14, 15 proves inequalities of areas of figures. In the
special case we are discussing, state explicitly the inequalities
that are being proved.
(7) Run through the proof—in the text of Archimedes’ Propositions
14,15—for this case.
Question 4.6. Make sure that you know exactly the place(s) where—
in Props 14, 15, 16—the hypothesis that the parabolic segment is in-
deed a parabolic segment. Where—and exactly how—is it used?
Query 4.7. (For people who know Calculus)
4These two lines should intersect the parabola at the points at which EΓ and
KΓ (respectively) intersect the parabola.
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5in other contexts he does the same thing with volume, or length