Mathematics Geometry
Mathematics Geometry
Frontispiece: Ininity
Beautiful Geometry
Eli Maor and EuGEn Jost
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TW
press.princeton.edu
Maor, Eli.
pages cm
Summary: “If you’ve ever thought that mathematics and art don’t mix, this stunning visual history of geometry will
change your mind. As much a work of art as a book about mathematics, Beautiful Geometry presents more than sixty
exquisite color plates illustrating a wide range of geometric patterns and theorems, accompanied by brief accounts of the
fascinating history and people behind each. With artwork by Swiss artist Eugen Jost and text by acclaimed math historian
Eli Maor, this unique celebration of geometry covers numerous subjects, from straightedge-and-compass constructions to
intriguing conigurations involving ininity. he result is a delightful and informative illustrated tour through the 2,500-year-
old history of one of the most important and beautiful branches of mathematics”— Provided by publisher.
Includes index.
QA447.M37 2014
516—dc23
2013033506
Printed in Canada
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
To Dalia, my dear wife of ifty years
May you enjoy many more years of
good health, happiness, and Naches from your family.
—Eli
Bibliography 183
43. lissajous Figures 143
El i Maor
him over the phone and told him about the progress Our aim is to reach a broad audience of high
we were making, which greatly pleased him. Sadly school and college students, mathematics and sci-
he will not be able to see it come to fruition. ence teachers, university instructors, and laypersons
Our book is meant to be enjoyed, pure and sim- who are not afraid of an occasional formula or equa-
ple. Each topic—a theorem, a sequence of numbers, tion. With this in mind, we limited the level of math-
or an intriguing geometric pattern—is explained in ematics to elementary algebra and geometry (“ele-
words and accompanied by one or more color plates mentary” in the sense that no calculus is used). We
of Eugen’s artwork. Most topics are taken from ge- hope that our book will inspire the reader to appre-
ometry; a few deal with numbers and numerical pro- ciate the beauty and aesthetic appeal of mathemat-
gressions. he chapters are largely independent of ics and of geometry in particular.
one another, so the reader can choose what he or she Many people helped us in making this book a re-
likes without afecting the continuity of reading. As ality, but special thanks go to Vickie Kearn, my
a rule we followed a chronological order, but occa- trusted editor at Princeton University Press, whose
sionally we grouped together subjects that are re- continuous enthusiasm and support has encouraged
lated to one another mathematically. I tried to keep us throughout the project; to the editorial and tech-
the technical details to a minimum, deferring some nical staf at Princeton University Press for their ef-
proofs to the appendix and referring others to exter- forts to ensure that the book meets the highest aes-
nal sources (when referring to books already listed thetic and artistic standards; to my son Dror for his
in the bibliography, only the author’s name and the technical help in typing the script of plate 26 in He-
book’s title are given). hus the book can serve as an brew; and, last but not least, to my dear wife Dalia
informal—and most certainly not complete—survey for her steady encouragement, constructive critique,
of the history of geometry. and meticulous proofreading of the manuscript.
P lay in G w it H PattErns, nuMBErs, anD F o rMs
EuGEn Jost
s S Figure 1.1
G A D H
B C E F Figure 2.1
Our illustration (plate 2) shows three identical his theorem may seem rather unassuming, but
red triangles, each of whose sides can be regarded as Euclid makes good use of it in proving other, more
a base. A series of blue triangles are built on each advanced theorems; most famous among them is the
base, with their vertices moving along a line parallel Pythagorean theorem, to which we will turn in chap-
to that base. hey get narrower as the vertices move ters 5 and 6.
farther out, yet they all have exactly the same area,
providing another example of a quantity that re- n ot E :
mains unchanged even as other quantities in the 1. QED stands for quod erat demonstrandum, Latin for
coniguration vary. “that which was to be demonstrated.”
3
Quadrilaterals
Plate 3. Quadrilaterals
8 BEautiFul GEoMEtry
P
S
B
D
d1
α d2
Q
R
Figure 4.1
10
Still another relation comes from adding two con- perfect numbers exist is unknown and remains one
secutive triangular numbers; again you get a perfect of the great mysteries of mathematics. Should such
square: 1 + 3 = 4 = 22, 6 + 10 = 16 = 42, 10 + 15 = 25 = 52, a number be found, it would be an oddity indeed!
and so on. his is true because he Pythagoreans established these relations, and
many others, by representing numbers as dots ar-
n(n + 1) (n + 1)(n + 2) ranged in various geometric patterns. For example,
+ = (n + 1)2 .
2 2 igure 4.2 shows two triangular arrays, each repre-
senting the sum 1 + 2 + 3 + 4. Taken together, they
Perhaps most surprising of all is the fact that every form a rectangle of 4 × 5 = 20 dots. herefore, the re-
perfect number is also a triangular number. hus 6, 28, quired sum is half of that, or 10. Repeating this for
496, and 8,128 are the 3rd, 7th, 31st, and 127th trian- other numbers of dots, it would have been easy for
gular numbers, respectively, and 257,885,160 ⋅ (257,885,161 the Pythagoreans to arrive at the formula 1 + 2 + 3
− 1) is the (257,885,161 − 1)th triangular number.2 Eu- + ⋅⋅⋅ + n = n(n + 1)/2. Similarly, igure 4.3 illustrates
clid, in his Elements (see page 3), proved that if 2n − 1 how they would have established the formula 1 + 3
is prime, then 2n−1 ⋅ (2n − 1) is perfect.3 More than two + 5 + 7 + ⋅⋅⋅ + (2n − 1) = n2, while igure 4.4 demon-
thousand years later, Leonhard Euler proved the strates that the sum of two consecutive triangular
converse: every even perfect number is of the form numbers is always a perfect square. he Pythagore-
2n−1 ⋅ (2n − 1) for some prime value of n. All 48 perfect ans viewed these relations as purely geometric;
numbers known today are even; whether any odd today, of course, we prefer to prove them algebra-
12 BEautiFul GEoMEtry
Plate 5. 25 + 25 = 49
5 . T H E P Y T H AG O R E A N T H E O R E M I 15
A L B A L B
K K
M M
D N C D N C
A D B
F E K Figure 6.2
6 . T H E P Y T H AG O R E A N T H E O R E M I I 19
AF perpendicular to AB and equal to it in length. sisting of a right angle and the common angle
Euclid’s lemma says that area ACHG = area AFED. ∠BAC). And as congruent triangles, they have the
To show this, divide AFED into two halves by the same area.
diagonal FD. By I 38, area FAD = area FAC, the two Now, what is true for one side of the right triangle
triangles having a common base AF and vertices D is also true of the other side (again, see igure 6.2):
and C that lie on a line parallel to AF. Likewise, di- area BMNC = area BDEK. hus, area ACHG + area
vide ACHG into two halves by diagonal GC. Again BMNC = area AFED + area BDEK = area AFKB: the Py-
by I 38, area AGB = area AGC, AG serving as a com- thagorean theorem.
mon base and vertices B and C lying on a line paral- Plate 6, Pythagorean Metamorphosis, shows a series
lel to it. But area FAD = 1⁄2 area AFED, and area of right triangles (in white) whose proportions
AGC = 1⁄2 area ACHG. hus, if we could only show change from one frame to the next, starting with the
that area FAC = area BAG, we would be done. extreme case where one side has zero length and
It is here that Euclid produces his trump card: then going through several phases until the other
triangles FAC and BAG are congruent because they side diminishes to zero. In accordance with Euclid’s
have two pairs of equal sides (AF = AB and AG lemma, the two blue regions in each phase have
= AC) and equal angles ∠FAC and ∠BAG (each con- equal areas, as do the orange regions.
7
Pythagorean triples
ined length! heir confusion can be seen from the are the irst few digits of the decimal expansion of
double meaning of the phrase irrational number: a 2, plate 8 provides the answer in lively colors. We
number that is not a ratio of two integers, but also named it his is Not the Square Root of 2, paraphrasing
an erratic number that deies rational behavior. René Magritte’s (1898–1967) famous painting of a
he crisis precipitated by this discovery had far- pipe, which he titled Ceci n’est pas une pipe (“this is
reaching consequences: it opened up a rift between not a pipe”). And, indeed, the long string of deci-
the two major branches of mathematics, geometry mals in our illustration is not the square root of 2,
and arithmetic (and, by extension, algebra), a rift just a close approximation of it.
that would impede the progress of mathematics for
the next two thousand years. It was not until the in-
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vention of analytic geometry by Descartes and Fer-
mat in the seventeenth century that the two branches 1. More precisely, the Pythagoreans discovered that the
were reunited. numbers 2 and 1 are incommensurable—they do not have
You have probably seen posters of π or e (the base a common measure. hat is, one cannot ind two line seg-
of natural logarithms) listing the irst few thousand ments of integer lengths m and n such that n ⋅ 2 = m ⋅ 1.
digits of their decimal expansion in row after row of Had such line segments existed, it would mean that
monotonous igures. If you were wondering what 2 = m/n, a rational number.
9
a repertoire of Means
the return light, the same wind now becomes a tail- his kind of mean, obtained by taking the recipro-
wind, increasing the ground speed to 550 mph. At cals of the two numbers, inding their arithmetic
what speed would the aircraft have to ly in still air to mean, and then taking the reciprocal of the result, is
complete the round trip in the same stretch of time called the harmonic mean. Putting this into the lan-
as when the wind was blowing? guage of algebra, if H denotes the harmonic mean of
Your irst impulse might be to give the answer as a and b, we have
500 mph, the aircraft’s own airspeed and the arith-
1 1 1 1 a + b
metic mean of 450 and 550. But irst impulses can be = + = .
H 2a b 2ab
wrong. Let the distance between the cities be d and
the required speed, v. he time it takes the aircraft Taking the reciprocal of this, we get H = 2ab/(a + b).
to complete the outbound stretch (lying against he formulas A = (a + b)/2, G = ab , and H = 2ab/
the headwind) is d/450, whereas the time of the (a + b) comprise the three classical means of the
return stretch is d/550. he total time is, therefore, Pythagoreans.
d/450 + d/550. Setting this equal to the time it would he names arithmetic, geometric, and harmonic for
take to complete the round trip at a constant ground the three means derive from the three classical
speed v, we have progressions with the same names: the arithmetic
d d 2d progression, in which there is a constant diference
+ = . between successive terms; the geometric progres-
450 550 v
sion, which keeps a constant ratio, and the har-
he distance d cancels out, leaving us with the monic progression, whose terms are the reciprocals
equation of those of an arithmetic progression. Here are three
1 1 2 examples:
+ = ,
450 550 v Arithmetic progression: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, . . .
from which we get Geometric progression: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, . . .
H ≤ G ≤ A,
S’
are similar, having a common right angle at Q and
equal angles QPS and QSR. hus, PQ / QS = SQ / QR ,
2
or QS = PQ ⋅ QR = a ⋅ b (we consider all line seg-
ments to be nondirectional, so QS = SQ ). his gives G
us QS = ab = G, the geometric mean of a and b.
To show that the geometric mean of a and b can-
not be larger than their arithmetic mean, we refer P’
Q’
R’
again to igure 10.1. Draw a line segment perpen- A H
dicular to PR at O, meeting the circle at T. Because Figure 10.2
OP is the radius, we have OT = OP = A. A It is then
clear from our igure that QS ≤ OT , that is, G ≤ A.
Furthermore, the two means are equal if and only if P'S' meets the extension of P'Q' at R', with Q'R' = H.
points S and T coincide, in which case PQ = QR , that And since we already know that G ≤ A, it follows
is, a = b. from the similarity of the triangles P'Q'S' and S'Q'R'
hat about the harmonic mean? Can it be con- that H ≤ G. Combining the two inequalities, we get
structed as easily as its arithmetic and geometric H ≤ G ≤ A, the arithmetic-geometric-harmonic mean
counterparts? he answer is yes, but in order to do inequality.
so we must irst prove a rather surprising result: if It is truly remarkable that the circle— perhaps the
we multiply together the expressions A = (a + b)/2 simplest of all geometric constructs—holds within it
and H = 2ab/(a + b), we get AH = [(a + b)/2] ⋅ [2ab/ so many hidden features waiting to be discovered by
G = AH : the geometric mean of a
(a + b)] = ab = G2, or G a keen observer. No wonder the Greeks held the cir-
and b is also the geometric mean of A and H. his result cle in such high esteem.
is the key to the construction of H. For, if we rewrite Plate 10, Mean Constructions (no pun intended!),
the equation G2 = AH as a proportion, A/G = G/H, we is a color-coded guide showing how to construct all
see that A and H play the same role vis-à-vis G as did three means from two line segments of given lengths
a and b in our construction of the geometric mean. (shown in red and blue). he arithmetic, geometric,
hus, having already found A and G from igure and harmonic means are colored in green, yellow,
10.1, construct right triangle P'S'Q' with P'Q' = A and and purple, respectively, while all auxiliary elements
Q'S' = G (igure 10.2). he perpendicular from S' to are in white.
11
two theorems from Euclid
C D P
Figure 11.2
continuity, two concepts that Euclid regarded as illustrate theorem 36 and the two lower circles (P in-
physical in nature and thus foreign to pure mathe- side), theorem 35. In each case, PR × PS is repre-
matical thinking. sented by a rectangle of sides PR and PS (shown in
Our illustration (plate 11) shows four identical orange), and since this product is constant for all
circles, each with a pair of chords intercepting at P. possible chords through P, the two rectangles on ei-
he two upper circles (with P outside each circle) ther side of each circle are equal in area.
12
Different, yet the same
T T
r p
O p O r
P R
R P
S Q
Q S
(a) (b)
Figure 12.1
represent the product PR × PS and the quantities ties)? Surely he must have noticed the similarity be-
2 2
PT (in the top igure) and RT (bottom igure). he tween the two, but the idea of generalizing several
two conigurations are exactly the same, except that particular cases into a broader, sweeping statement
the given and implied circles reverse their roles. was foreign to the Greeks. To Euclid, each case rep-
he French mathematician Lazare Carnot (1753– resented a separate theorem, standing irmly on its
1823) achieved this uniication by regarding all line own. Generalizations had to wait for future genera-
segments as directed quantities that can assume posi- tions of mathematicians.1
tive or negative values (for example, PR = − RP ).
his, however, would not have sat well with Euclid,
n ot E :
because the Greeks did not recognize negative quan-
tities. hy, then, didn’t Euclid think of combining 1. his chapter is based on an article by Maor pub-
the two theorems the way we did here (that is, by lished in he Mathematics Teacher (May 1979, pp. 363–
regarding all line segments as nondirected quanti- 367).
13
one theorem, three Proofs
C C
h h
A B A B
m D n m n
Figure 13.1 h
C’ Figure 13.2
40
Plate 13. 6 2 = 9 x 4
13. ONE THEOREM, THREE PROOFS 41
17 = 1 x 17
17 = 2 x 8 + 1
17 = 2 x 7 + 3
17 = 2 x 6 + 5
17 = 3 x 5 + 2
17 = 4 x 4 + 1
17 = 5 x 3 + 2
17 = 6 x 2 + 5
17 = 7 x 2 + 3
17 = 8 x 2 + 1
73939133
7393913
739391
73939
7393
739
73
7
Plate 15.1. Prime and Prime Again
47
number and keep peeling of the last digits one by in order. If aliens from another planet would look at
one, until only 7 is left. For no apparent reason, each this picture, they would most likely not be able to
number in this sequence is a prime. Plate 15.2 is a read its textual message, but they just might dis-
quote from the eminent popularizer of mathematics cover the hidden primes around it—and perhaps re-
Martin Gardner (1914–2010), whose many articles spond in kind.
on the primes made them a household name. Notice
the dots surrounding the text, starting with the
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arrow at the top: if you look carefully, you’ll dis-
cover that the second, third, ifth, seventh, elev- 1. Source: he Largest Known Primes—A Summary, on the
enth, . . . dots are marked in red—the prime numbers Web at http://primes.utm.edu/largest.html, 2013.
16
0.999 . . . ═ ?
0 1
0 1/2 1
0 1/2 1/4 1
maining diference as small as we please. In the case and so on. he sum seems to be getting ever closer
of the runner, we have to 1, the limiting value of the series.
Of course, adding the irst few terms of our series
1
= 0.5, does not prove that it converges to 1—or even that a
2 limiting sum exists in the irst place. Returning to
1 1 3
+ = = 0.75, the general case, it is not diicult to show that as
2 4 4 long as −1 < r < 1, the limiting sum is a/(1 − r) (we
1 1 1 7 give the proof in the appendix). For the runner’s
+ + = = 0.875,
2 4 8 8 paradox we have a = 1⁄2 and r = 1⁄2, so the sum is (1⁄2)/
1 1 1 1 15 (1 − 1⁄2) = 1, and the runner will reach the inish line
+ + + = = 0.9375,
2 4 8 16 16 just ine.
52 BEautiFul GEoMEtry
Going back to the question we posed at the be- convincing refutation of the paradoxes. And no
ginning of this chapter—is 0.999 . . . exactly equal to wonder: to explain them, one must irst accept the
1, or only approximately so?—we note that the re- existence of ininity as a mathematical reality, a
peating decimal 0.999 . . . is actually a geometric se- mental leap that even nineteenth-century mathe-
ries, 9⁄10 + 9⁄100 + 9⁄1,000 + ⋅⋅⋅ , whose initial term is a = 9⁄10 maticians were not quite ready to take. It took the
and whose common ratio is r = 1⁄10. Since this com- insight of a relatively unknown genius by the name
mon ratio satisies the condition −1 < r < 1, the series Georg Cantor to take this crucial step, and in
will converge to the limit (9⁄10)/(1 − 1⁄10) = (9⁄10)/ doing so he revolutionized our understanding of
(9⁄10) = 1, settling the issue once and for all. ininity. We will take a closer look at Cantor’s ideas
Zeno’s paradoxes caused a stir in the mathemati- in chapter 51. However, if you are still wondering
cal community that lasted well over two thousand how a string of nines can make up a 1, plate 16,
years. Despite volumes of arguments, mostly philo- 0.999 ... = 1 will provide an answer—albeit a whim-
sophical or religious, no one was able to ofer a sical one.
17
Eleven
became the subject of endless fascination, “a geomet- he result is now known as the Mohr-Mascheroni
ric solitaire which over the ages has attracted hosts of theorem.
players, and though now well over two thousand By itself, a geometric construction is a stark,
years old, has lost none of its singular charm and black-and-white array of lines and circles. But add
appeal.”1 color to it, and it can become an exquisite work
In fact, you don’t even need a straightedge. As the or art, as plate 18, Seven Circles a Flower Maketh,
Danish geometer Jørgen Mohr (1640–1697) proved shows. In the coming chapters we will look at some
in 1672, every construction that can be done with a particular constructions, among them the regular
straightedge and compass can be done with a com- pentagon.
pass alone—provided you think of a line as given by
the two intersection points of a pair of circles. Be-
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cause Mohr published his result in Danish rather
than Latin—the language of scientiic discourse at 1. he quote is from Howard Eves, A Survey of Geometry,
the time—it received little attention until it was re- p. 154. It might be supposed that the modern compass,
discovered in 1797 by the Italian Lorenzo Masche- being capable of transferring distances, can do more than
roni (1750–1800). It was only by a curious incident its collapsible predecessor, but this is not the case: it can be
that Mohr’s original theorem came to light, when a shown that the two are completely equivalent in the sense
young mathematics student found a copy of his that each can do everything the other can, although per-
work in a secondhand bookstore in Copenhagen. haps requiring more steps. For a proof, see Eves, p. 155.
19
Hexagons
55
34
Figure 20.1
Among the purely mathematical properties of the nouncing the answer, 143, while they are still doing
Fibonacci numbers, we mention here just one: the their sums. It always works! (See the appendix for a
sum of the irst n members of the sequence is always proof.)
equal to the next-to-next member, minus 1; that is, Perhaps most surprising of all is a discovery made
in 1611 by Johannes Kepler: divide any member of
F1 + F2 + F3 + ⋅⋅⋅ + Fn = Fn+2 − 1.
the sequence by its immediate predecessor. As you
For example, the sum of the irst 8 Fibonacci num- do this with ever-increasing numbers, the ratios
bers is the tenth number minus 1: 1 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 5 + 8 seem to converge to a ixed number, a limit:
+ 13 + 21 = 54 = 55 − 1. You can use this fact to surprise
your friends by asking them to ind the sum of, say, 2 3 5 8
= 2, = 1.5, = 1.666 …, = 1.6,
the irst 10 Fibonacci numbers. Most likely they will 1 2 3 5
start by adding the terms one by one, a process that
will take some time. But knowing that the twelfth 13 21
= 1.625, = 1.615…, …
Fibonacci number is 144, you can outdo them by an- 8 13
2 0 . F I B O N AC C I N U M B E R S 65
his limit, about 1.618, turns out to be one of rectangles whose dimensions are exactly the Fibo-
the most famous numbers in mathematics, nearly nacci numbers. he word Girasole (“turning to the
the equal in status to π and e. Its exact value is (1 + sun” in Italian) refers to the presence of these num-
5 )/2. It came to be known as the golden ratio (sectio bers in the spiral arrangement of the seeds of a sun-
aura in Latin), and it holds the secret for construct- lower—a truly remarkable example of mathematics
ing the regular pentagon, as we will see in chapter 22. at work in nature.
Plate 20, Girasole, shows a series of squares, each
of which, when adjoined to its predecessor, forms a
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rectangle. Starting with a black square of unit
length, adjoin to it its white twin, and you get a 2 × 1 1. he sequence is sometimes counted with 0 as the irst
rectangle. Adjoin to it the green square, and you get member. It can also be extended to negative numbers: . . .
a 3 × 2 rectangle. Continuing in this manner, you get 5, −3, 2, −1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, . . ..
21
the Golden ratio
x 1- x
1 Figure 21.1
67
1.618033988749894848204
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34,
5868343656381177203091
55, 89, 144, 233, 377,
7980576286213544862270
610, 987, 1597, 2584,
5260462818902449707207
4181, 6765, 10948,
2041893911374847540880
17713, 28661, ...
7538689175212663386222
3536931793180060766726
28661 : 17713 = 1.618... 3544333890865959395829
17713 : 28661 = 0.618... 0563832266131992829026
788067520876689250171...
φ11 = 1φ
φ22 = 1φ + 1 a b
1 φ33 = 2φ + 1 a : b = (a + b) : a
φ44 = 3φ + 2 φ= 1+ 1+ 1+ 1+ ... >
φ55 = 5φ + 3 a = 61.8 % b = 38.2 %
2 φ66 = 8φ + 5
...
1+ 5
φ=
2
tance from the capital was tucked between the Po- a cluster of small pentagonal-shaped metal pen-
tomac River, one of its tributaries, and three access nants with the emblem of the Soviet Union, making
roads, an area roughly forming a pentagonal shape. the pentagon the irst human-made object to reach
So a pentagon it would be, prompting Hermann another world.
Weyl, in his classic book Symmetry, to comment: “By
its size and distinctive shape, it provides an attrac-
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tive landmark for bombers.” Fifty years after he
wrote those words, on September 11, 2001, his pre- 1. To see why this is a 72−72−36-degree triangle, in-
monition tragically came true. scribe the pentagon in a circle with center O. We have
he pentagon also made history of a diferent ∠AOB = 360°/5 = 72°, so ∠ACB = 36° because its vertex is
kind. hen the Soviet spacecraft Luna 2 crashed on , as
on the circumference and subtends the same arc, AB
the Moon on September 14, 1959, it scattered around ∠AOB.
23
the 17-sided regular Polygon
4+
17 = 2 1
Plate 23. Homage to Carl Friedrich Gauss
2 3 . t H E 1 7 - s i D E D r E G u l a r P o ly G o n 75
Figure 23.2
76 BEautiFul GEoMEtry
Gauss’s achievement is immortalized in his Ger- It is extremely rare to ind examples of a 17-sided
man hometown of Brunswick, where a large statue regular gon in nature, let alone in art or architec-
of him is decorated with an ornamental 17-pointed ture. But if you search around long enough, you will
star (plate 23 is an artistic rendition of the actual star eventually ind what you were looking for. One of us
on the pedestal, which has deteriorated over the (Jost) recently discovered in a shopping mall in the
years); reportedly the mason in charge of the job town of Leipzig a 17-sided glass dome, with a 17-
thought that a 17-sided polygon would look too sided pattern decorating the loor under it (igure
much like a circle, so he opted for the star instead.2 23.2).
In 1837, Pierre Laurent Wantzel (1814–1848) proved
that the polygons Gauss identiied are in fact the
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only ones constructible with Euclidean tools, mak-
ing Gauss’s discovery a necessary and suicient con- 1. For further discussion of the 17-gon, see Hartshorne,
dition for the construction. hus, a regular polygon Geometry, chapter 29.
of 15 sides is constructible, because 15 = 3 × 5, and 2. I wish to thank Professor Manfred Stern of Halle,
0
both 3 and 5 are Fermat primes (3 = 22 + 1 and Germany, for updating me about the Gauss statue in
1
5 = 22 + 1);3 but a regular 14-sided gon is not, be- Brunswick.
cause 14 = 2 × 7, and 7 is not a Fermat prime. Neither 3. Proposition 16 of Book IV of the Elements gives the
is a 50-sided gon, because 50 = 2 × 5 × 5, and the dou- construction of a regular 15-sided polygon. For a nice ani-
ble appearance of 5 in the factorization disqualiies mation of the construction, see http://en.wikipedia.org/
the 50-gon from being constructible. wiki/Pentadecagon#Regular_pentadecagon.
24
Fifty
Coincidentally, 50 stars appear on the American without ofending any other state! We display the
national lag, the Stars and Stripes, each star repre- two lags, the actual and the hypothetical, in plate
senting one state of the Union. his opens up an 24.1.
interesting possibility. Most people, looking at the Plate 24.2 shows a laced pattern of 50 dots, based
pattern of stars on the lag, will see an arrangement on an ancient Celtic motif. Note that the entire array
of nine horizontal rows alternating between six and can be crisscrossed with a single interlacing thread;
ive stars per row (5 × 6 + 4 × 5 = 50). But if you look at compare this with the similar pattern of 11 dots (see
the star arrangement diagonally, an entirely new chapter 17), where two separate threads were neces-
pattern emerges: ive rows with 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 stars, sary to cover the entire array. As we said before,
followed by the same pattern in reverse. In chapter 4 every number has its own personality.
we saw that the sum of the irst n consecutive odd
integers is n2. In our case, 1 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 9 = 52 = 25,
making the total number of stars 50.
n ot E :
But 50 is also equal to 72 + 12, which can be ar-
ranged in a square of 7 × 7 = 49 stars and a single ad- 1. Except when a = b or c = d, in which case the product
ditional star anywhere outside. his single star could is the sum of two squares in just one way; for example,
±
then stand for any one state of the Union, allowing 10 = 2 × 5 = (12 + 12)(12 + 22) = (1 × 1 ± 1 × 2)2 + (1 × 2 1 × 1)2 =
each state to claim that it has a privileged status 32 + 12.
25
Doubling the Cube
1. 2 5 9 9 2 1 0 4 9 8 9
4
8 7
. .
3 1
.
6 4
.
5
7
7 0 2
6 7
5
2 1
0
8 3 5 2 7 8 2 7 2 0 0 6
tual crisis that struck the Pythagoreans when they Plate 25, he Oracles of Delos, shows a fanciful “du-
proved that the square root of 2 could not be ex- plication” of two unfolded dice, which, when added
pressed as a ratio of two integers. it showed that together, produce a third dice of twice the volume of
even mathematics, for all its reputation as the disci- the original dice. Of course, the plus and equal signs
pline of absolute, infallible truth, has its inherent should not be taken literally, reminding us again
limitations. But this hasn’t stopped countless ama- that the artist is not bound by the same constraints
teurs and cranks from submitting their “solutions” that limit a mathematician. And yet not everything
to professional journals, with visions of lasting is fanciful here: the side of the large cube is about
fame and perhaps even a monetary award. Appar- 1.259 . . . as large as that of the small cubes. his
ently some people will never take no for an an- number is the decimal value of 3 2 , the very stum-
swer—even if that no derives its authority from bling block that stood in the way of solving the De-
mathematics! lian problem.
26
squaring the Circle
π = 3
Plate 26.1. π = 3
86
tive solution—a negative one—came only in 1882, a circular disk (in red) centered on it. As the squares
when Carl Louis Ferdinand von Lindemann (1852– decrease in size, the circles expand, yet the sum of
1939) proved that the task cannot be done—it is im- their areas remains constant. In the central frame, the
possible to square a circle with Euclidean tools. Ac- square and circle have the same area, thus ofering a
tually, Lindemann proved something diferent: that computer-generated “solution” to the quadrature
the number π, the constant at the heart of the quadra- problem. In the panel on the lower right, the squares
ture problem, is transcendental. A transcendental and circles reverse their roles, but the sum of their
number is a number that is not the solution of a poly- areas is still constant. he entire sequence is thus a
nomial equation with integer coeicients. A num- metamorphosis from square to circle and back.
ber that is not transcendental is called algebraic. All Of course, Euclid would not have approved of
rational numbers are algebraic; for example, 3⁄5 is the such a solution to the quadrature problem, because
solution of the equation 5x − 3 = 0. So are all square it does not employ the Euclidean tools—a straight-
roots, cubic roots, and so on; for example, 2 is the edge and compass. It does, instead, employ a tool of
positive solution of x2 − 2 = 0, and 3 2 − 5 is one so- far greater power—the computer. But this power
lution of x6 − 4x3 − 1 = 0. he name transcendental has comes at a price: the circles, being generated pixel
nothing mysterious about it; it simply implies that by pixel like a pointillist painting, are in reality not
such numbers transcend the realm of algebraic true circles, only simulations of circles.1 As the old
(polynomial) equations. saying goes, “there’s no free lunch”—not even in
Now it had already been known that if π turned geometry.
out to be transcendental, this would at once estab-
lish that the quadrature problem cannot be solved.
n ot E :
Lindemann’s proof of the transcendence of π there-
fore settled the issue once and for all. But settling 1. he very irst of the 23 deinitions that open Euclid’s
the issue is not the same as putting it to rest; being Elements deines a point as “that which has no part.” And
the most famous of the three classical problems, we since all objects of classical geometry—lines, circles, and
can rest assured that the “circle squarers” will pur- so on—are made of points, they rest on the subtle assump-
sue their pipe dream with unabated zeal, ensuring tion that Euclidean space is continuous. his, of course, is
that the subject will be kept alive forever. not the case with computer space, where Euclid’s dimen-
Plate 26.2, Metamorphosis of a Circle, shows four sionless point is replaced by a pixel—small, yet of inite
large panels. he panel on the upper left contains size—and space between adjacent pixels is empty, con-
nine smaller frames, each with a square (in blue) and taining no points.
27
archimedes Measures the Circle
polygon, and divide it by the circle’s diameter (by would be another two thousand years before math-
deinition, π is the circumference-to-diameter ratio). ematicians would prove this fact conclusively.
With each step, the polygons will grip the circle Plate 27, Homage to Archimedes, shows a black cir-
more tightly from within, resulting in approxima- cle and a series of inscribed and circumscribing reg-
tions of π progressively increasing in accuracy. hese ular polygons (in blue and red, respectively) of 3, 6,
approximations, however, are all undervalues of the 12, 24, and 48 sides. We see how the circle is squeezed
exact value of π. Archimedes therefore repeated the between each pair of polygons, the it getting tighter
process with circumscribing polygons, gripping the as the number of sides increases. he inal (central)
circle from the outside and giving a series of overval- circle is practically indistinguishable from the 48-
ues of increasing accuracy. From the 96-sided in- sided polygons that hold it tight. For practical rea-
scribed and circumscribing polygons, he concluded sons Archimedes started with a hexagon rather than
that the actual value of π lies between 310⁄71 and 310⁄70 a triangle, because its perimeter is easy to ind; and
(in decimal notation, between 3.14085 and 3.14286). he doubled the number of sides so that he could use
his last value is equal to 22⁄7, an approximation a formula he himself had devised for computing the
which in precomputer times was often used as a perimeter of a regular 2n-gon from that of a regular
rough estimate. n-gon.1
Besides devising the irst workable algorithm for
approximating π, Archimedes’s method also gave us
n ot E :
a glimpse into the theoretical nature of this famous
number. It hinted to the fact that the exact value of 1. For a full account of Archimedes’s method, see he
π can never be found, because it involves a process Works of Archimedes, edited by T. L. Heath (New York:
that must be repeated ininitely many times. It Dover. 1953), pp. 91–98.
28
the Digit Hunters
devise such a formula was the Frenchman François We listed these formulas here mainly because of
Viète (1540–1603), who in 1596 discovered the ini- their historical signiicance, although their slow rate
nite product of convergence makes them of little use in practice
(with the last series, it takes 600 terms to get π to just
2 2 2+ 2 2+ 2+ 2
= ⋅ ⋅ ⋅⋯. two decimal places, 3.14). And yet they are remark-
π 2 2 2 able because they tie the number π, the circumfer-
In 1671, the Scotsman James Gregory (1638– ence-to-diameter ratio of a circle, to the integers;
1675) discovered the ininite series they show once again the universality of mathemat-
ics—its ability to link together diferent concepts
π 1 1 1
= 1 − + − + −⋯. that at irst sight seem totally unrelated.
4 3 5 7
Plate 28, Almost π, gives the irst 12,827 digits of
Not to be outdone, Leonhard Euler (1707–1783) this famous number, enough to give any potential
solved one of the great mysteries of his time: to ind digit reciter a full load of numbers to memorize.
the sum of the series 1 + 1⁄22 + 1⁄32 + 1⁄42 + ⋅⋅⋅. In 1734 he
2
announced that the series converges to π ⁄ 6:
N oT e :
2
π 1 1 1 1. Source: BBC News, on the Web at http://news.bbc
= 1+ 2 + 2 + 2 +⋯ .
6 2 3 4 .co.uk/2/hi/technology/8442255.stm.
29
Conics
figure 29.1
95
d figure 29.2
(“locus”) of all points equidistant from d and F (ig- screen. It also works in reverse: if a source of light or
ure 29.2). d is called the directrix, and F, the focus of a radio transmitter is placed at the focus, the emitted
the parabola. Like all conics, the parabola is a sym- beam will be relected in a direction parallel to the
metric curve: its axis of symmetry passes through F parabola’s axis, a feature brought to good use in the
and runs at a right angle to d. As Archimedes had relective surface of a car’s headlights.
discovered, rays of sunlight arriving at the parabola
in a direction parallel to its axis are relected toward •
a single point, the focus, as shown in plate 29.1 (in-
deed, “focus” in Latin means ireplace). his prop- he ellipse is the locus of points, the sum of whose
erty inds its modern use in the ubiquitous satellite distances from two ixed points, the ellipse’s foci, is
antenna dish—a concave surface with a parabolic constant. A ray of light emanating from one focus is
cross section that, when aimed at a satellite in geo- relected by the ellipse toward the other focus. A
stationary orbit, collects its signals at the focal point, striking example of this is the famous hispering
where they are ampliied and fed into your TV Gallery in the United States Capitol in Washington,
97
DC, where visitors gathered at one focal point of the hen you throw two stones into a pond, each will
elliptically shaped hall can hear their guide, stand- create a disturbance that propagates outward from
ing some distance away at the other focus, whisper the point of impact in concentric circles. he two
some words seemingly to himself or herself. It never systems of circular waves eventually cross each other
fails to impress the audience. and form a pattern of ripples, alternating between
crests and troughs. Because this interference pattern
• depends on the phase diference between the two
oncoming waves, the ripples invariably form a sys-
Like the ellipse, the hyperbola has two foci, but this tem of confocal ellipses and hyperbolas, all sharing
time the diference of the distances from any point on the same two foci. In this system, no two ellipses
the hyperbola to the foci is constant. he hyperbola ever cross one another, nor do two hyperbolas, but
consists of two disconnected branches, separated by every ellipse crosses every hyperbola at right angles.
two lines of demarcation that cross each other mid- he two families form an orthogonal system of curves,
way between the foci. hese lines are the hyperbo- as we see in plate 29.2.
la’s asymptotes: they approach the hyperbola ever so But the conic sections also play a role on a much
close but never touch it—which is precisely what grander scale. he German astronomer Johannes
the word asymptote means: “don’t touch me.” he Kepler, whom we met already twice before, discov-
asymptotes are like signposts pointing the way to ered that all planets move around the Sun in ellipti-
ininity. cal orbits. his discovery inally put to rest the old
A ray of light originating at one focus is relected Greek belief that the planets move around the Earth
by the hyperbola in a direction away from the other in perfect circles or combinations of circles. A cen-
focus. So the word focus in this case is really a misno- tury later Isaac Newton would show that every celes-
mer: rather than concentrate at the focus, beams of tial body—whether a planet, a comet, or a moon—
light are scattered in every direction as they bounce moves around its parent body in an ellipse, a
of the hyperbola; “antifocus” would perhaps be a parabola, or a hyperbola. he conic sections thus
better name. became the cosmic sections.
30
=
3=4
Plate 30. 3 4
30. 3/3 = 4/4 101
verges to the limit 1/(1 − 3⁄4) = 1/(1⁄4) = 4 (see the ap- rage in the early and middle seventeenth century—
pendix, page 177). herefore, the total shaded area just before the invention of the calculus—when the
will be 1⁄4 × 4 = 1—the area of the original square. In limit concept was not yet fully understood. All kinds
other words, after suiciently many steps, the shaded of “strange” results followed from them, which left
part will nearly cover the entire original square, even their discoverers with a sense of fascination. In 1668
though at each step we shaded only one-fourth of the Danish-born mathematician Nicolaus Mercator
each square. Plate 30, 3/3 =4/4, carries this process (ca. 1620–1687) —one of many “minor mathemati-
to its sixth stage; the shaded and unshaded squares cians” who paved the way to the invention of the
are shown here in yellow and blue, respectively. calculus—showed that the “ininite polynomial”
2 3 4
he ininite geometric series was already known (today we call it a power series) x − x ⁄ 2 + x ⁄ 3 − x ⁄4 + ⋅⋅⋅
to the Greeks; in fact, it is at the heart of Zeno’s par- converges to ln(1 + x) whenever −1 < x ≤ 1. Put x = 1 in
adoxes (see again chapter 16). he Greeks knew that the two expressions, and you get
under certain conditions—speciically, when the 1 1 1
common ratio is less than 1 in absolute value—the ln 2 = 1 − + − + −⋯ ,
2 3 4
series seems to get closer and closer to a speciic
number. Today we call this number the limit of the a series as remarkable as the Gregory series (page
series. he Greeks, however, could not perceive that 93). It is indeed puzzling why such a simple series—
the sum of the entire series is actually equal to the the sum of the reciprocals of the integers, taken with
limit. A Greek mathematician would say only that alternating signs—should have anything to do with
with each additional shaded square, the combined ln 2 and by implication with e, a number intimately
area will get closer and closer to 1. tied with the calculus. Unfortunately, there is no ob-
he geometric series is only the simplest of nu- vious way to illustrate such series geometrically; the
merous series that have fascinated mathematicians geometric series is one of the few exceptions, so the
over the ages. Ininite series and products were the blue and yellow squares of our plate will have to do.
31
The Harmonic series
rounded to the nearest thousandth; the sum of the 1⁄6 + 1⁄7 + 1⁄8 > 1⁄8 + 1⁄8 + 1⁄8 + 1⁄8, etc., we have
103
1
2
1
4
1
6
1
8
1
10 figure 31.1
Euclid. Nevertheless, one cannot fail to admire the to great advantage when he invented his version of
simplicity of the idea behind it—to think of A, B, the diferential calculus.
and C as if they were physical objects with appro- If we rewrite the triple product as
priate weights and then ind their center of gravity
G. Surprisingly, the actual values of these weights BA' ⋅ CB' ⋅ AC' = A'C ⋅ B'A ⋅ C'B ,
disappear from the inal equation, leaving us with a we ind that interchanging the primed letters with
purely geometric relation between the line seg- the unprimed ones does not afect the value of the
ments in question. You will ind Ceva’s proof in the product on each side—it remains invariant. his is
appendix. shown in our illustration (plate 32): if you multiply
But there is more to Ceva’s theorem: if you look together the lengths of the red-colored line segments
again at the triple product, you may be tempted to and then do the same with the green-colored line
regard the letters as variables that can be multiplied segments, you end up with the same product.
and divided as if they were actual numbers. hen the he central triangle in the illustration shows sev-
six letters mutually cancel out, leaving the product eral contour lines, each representing one value of
to be equal to 1! To be sure, this is no more than a the product and thus one position of G. In honor of
formal manipulation of symbols, but such formal- Giovanni Ceva we will call them isocevas, in analogy
ism often plays a role in mathematics and may even with isobars and isotherms—lines connecting points
hint at some deeper connections. Gottfried Wilhelm of equal pressure or equal temperature on a weather
von Leibniz (1646–1716) used a similar symbolism map.
33
e
α
α
α
x
O
figure 34.1
x
O
figure 35.1
curve turned out to be an inverted cycloid—the same the early seventeenth century they presented a chal-
curve that solved the tautochrone problem. But in- lenging task.
stead of rejoicing in their success, the discovery em- Plate 35, Relections on a Rolling heel, shows the
broiled the two brothers in a bitter priority dispute, path of a luminous point attached to a rolling wheel
resulting in a permanent rift between them. at three diferent distances from the center: at top,
he cycloid had some more surprises in store. the point is outside the wheel’s rim (as on the lank
Evangelista Torricelli (1608–1647), famous for his of a railroad car wheel); at the middle, it is exactly
invention of the mercury barometer, is credited with on the rim; and at the bottom, inside of it. he top
inding the area under one arc of the cycloid: the and bottom curves are called prolate and curtate cy-
area turned out to be 3πa2, where a is the radius of cloids, respectively, while the middle curve is the or-
the generating circle. A few decades later Christo- dinary cycloid. You can see the curtate variant at
pher Wren (1632–1723), London’s venerable archi- night as the path traced by the relector on a bicycle
tect who rebuilt the city after the Great Fire of 1666, wheel as the cyclist moves forward.1
found that the length of each arc is 8a; surprisingly,
the constant π is not involved. his was one of the
N oT e :
irst successful rectiications of a curve—inding the
arc length between two points on the curve. With 1. For a full history of the cycloid, see the article “he
the invention of calculus in the decade 1666–1676, Helen of Geometry” by John Martin, he College Mathe-
problems like these could be solved routinely, but in matics Journal (September 2009, pp. 17–27).
36
epicycloids and Hypocycloids
figure 36.1
figure 36.2
figure 36.3
figure 36.4
figure 36.5
121
oid, so called because of its heart-shaped form (ig- planetary epicycles. In fact, this latter curve closely
ure 36.5). Its perimeter is 16R and its area is 6πR2.2,3 resembles the path of Venus against the backdrop of
he Greek astronomer Claudius Ptolemaeus the ixed stars, as seen from Earth. his is due to an
(commonly known as Ptolemy, ca. 85–165 CE), in 8-year cycle during which Earth, Venus, and the Sun
an attempt to explain the occasional retrograde mo- will be aligned almost perfectly ive times. Surpris-
tion (east to west, instead of the usual west to east) ingly, 8 Earth years also coincide with 13 Venusian
of the planets, ascribed to them a complex path in years, locking the two planets in an 8:13 celestial
which each planet moved along a small circle whose resonance and giving Fibonacci aicionados one
center moved around Earth in a much larger circle. more reason to celebrate!
he resulting orbit, an epicycle, has the shape of a
coil wound around a circle. hen even this model
failed to account for the positions of the planets at
N oT e s :
any given time, more epicycles were added on top of
the existing ones, making the system increasingly 1. We might mention in passing that the astroid has the
cumbersome. It was only when Johannes Kepler dis- unusual rectangular equation x2/3 + y2/3 = R2/3.
covered that the planets move around the Sun in el- 2. For nice simulations of how these curves are gener-
lipses that the unwieldy epicycles became unneces- ated, go to http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Hypocycloid
sary and were laid to rest. .html and http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Epicycloid.html.
Plate 36 shows a ive-looped epicycloid (in blue) 3. For more on the properties of epicycloids and hypo-
and a prolate epicycloid (in red) similar to Ptolemy’s cycloids, see Maor, Trigonometric Delights, chapter 7.
37
The euler line
Said the Canadian geometer H.S.M. Coxeter: in green, red, and orange, respectively, and the
“Some of his simplest discoveries are of such a na- Euler line, in yellow. We call this a construction
ture that one can well imagine the ghost of Euclid without words, where the points and lines speak for
saying, ‘hy on earth didn’t I think of that?’ ”1 themselves.
Our illustration Nine Points and Ten Lines (plate
37) shows the point-by-point construction of Eul-
N oT e :
er’s line, beginning with the three points deining
the triangle (marked in blue). he circumcenter O, 1. Coxeter, Introduction to Geometry, p. 17. For a proof
the centroid G, and the orthocenter H are marked of Euler’s line theorem, see pp. 17–18.
38
inversion
figure 39.1
contact of adjacent circles lie on yet another circle almost half a century before Steiner. An old Japa-
(marked in green).1 nese tradition, going back to the seventeenth cen-
Plate 39 illustrates several Steiner chains, each tury, was to write a geometric problem on a wooden
comprising ive circles that touch an outer circle (al- tablet, called sangaku, and hang it in a Buddhist
ternately colored in blue and orange) and an inner temple or Shinto shrine for visitors to see. A ine ex-
black circle. he central panel shows this chain in its ample of Steiner’s—or Chokuyen’s—chain appeared
inverted, symmetric “ball-bearing” coniguration. on a sangaku at the Ushijima Chomeiji temple in
As happens occasionally, a theorem that has been Tokyo. he tablet no longer exists, but an image of
known in the West for many years turned out to have it appeared in a book published about the same time
already been discovered earlier in the East. Steiner’s as Steiner’s discovery (see igure 39.2).2
porism is a case in point: a Japanese mathematician, It is somewhat of a mystery why this theorem be-
Ajima Chokuyen (1732–1798), discovered it in 1784, came known as Steiner’s porism. You will not ind
39. sTeiNer’s PorisM 133
in 1867, in recognition of which he was awarded the cally with a harmonograph—a device consisting of
prestigious Lacaze Prize in 1873. two coupled pendulums oscillating at right angles
Our illustration (plate 43) shows four Lissajous to each other; the frequencies could be varied by ad-
igures with (going clockwise) frequency ratios of justing the length of each pendulum. You can still
1:2, 2:3, 3:4, and 4:5 and equal amplitudes. With see a harmonograph at work at a few science muse-
graphing software you can create a virtually ininite ums, but the digital age has made it obsolete.
variety of these igures, with arbitrary amplitudes,
frequency ratios, and phase diferences. It is fasci-
N oT e :
nating to watch how even a small change in any of
these parameters—and especially the frequency 1. To see this, write x = a sin ω1t, y = b sin (ω1t + π/2) =
ratio—can drastically alter the ensuing igure. In b cos ω1t. Dividing the irst equation by a and the second
years past, these igures were generated mechani- by b, squaring, and adding, we get x2/a2 + y2/b2 = 1.
44
symmetry i
Revolution); he was just 20 years old. In their short tion symmetry, while ive of the remaining circles
lives they changed the course of mathematics, mak- exhibit threefold rotation symmetries with or with-
ing it more formal, more abstract, and more general out relection (if you disregard the inner details in
than ever before. some of them). he circle in the 10-o’clock position
Plate 44, Gothic Rose, shows a rosette, a common has the twofold rotation symmetry of the yin-yang
motif on stained glass windows like those one can icon. In the next chapter we will see how these sym-
ind at numerous places of worship. he circle at metry patterns can be given a precise mathematical
the center illustrates a fourfold rotation and relec- formulation.
45
symmetry ii
r1
ABC, with vertex A at the top, followed clockwise by
vertices B and C. Let us denote the six symmetry op-
erations by letters: r1, r2, r3 for the 120°, 240°, and
360° clockwise rotations and m1, m2, m3 for the relec- C B B A
tions in the altitudes through the top, lower-right, figure 45.1
and lower-left vertices (henceforth we’ll refer to
these vertices as nos. 1, 2, and 3 rather than A, B, and
C, because they keep changing their position as we
rotate and relect the triangle; thus the position-1
vertex is always at the top, 2 is at lower right, and 3
is at lower left, regardless of the positions of A, B, same as “doing nothing”—it leaves everything un-
and C). changed. To summarize,
Now a 120° rotation changes triangle ABC to
r1 : ABC → CAB; r2 : ABC → BCA; r3 : ABC → ABC.
CAB, which is just a cyclic permutation of the let-
ters A, B and C, so that C now occupies the 1-posi- Turning now to the relections, we can summarize
tion, A occupies the 2-position, and B the 3-posi- them as follows:
tion (see igure 45.1). In a similar way, a 240°
m1 : ABC → ACB; m2 : ABC → CBA; m3 : ABC → BAC.
rotation transforms ABC into BCA, and a 360° rota-
tion changes ABC into . . . ABC—it brings the trian- Note that in each relection one letter stays put,
gle back to its starting orientation. his, of course, while the other two switch positions—exactly what a
should come as no surprise: a 360° rotation is the mirror relection does (igure 45.2).
150 BeauTiful GeoMeTry
A A
m1
C B B C figure 45.2
A C C
r1 m1
C B B A A B figure 45.3
We are now ready to produce our trump card: we We have, in efect, created a kind of algebra of
can follow any of the six symmetry operations with symmetry operations, similar in some ways to the or-
a second symmetry operation; for example, a 120° dinary algebra of numbers and variables we learn in
rotation followed by a relection in the 1-position school, but with one crucial diference: unlike num-
amounts to bers, the product of two symmetry operations is
generally noncommutative—the order in which we
ABC → CAB → CBA.
perform the operations does matter. To see this, let
But CBA can be obtained directly from ABC by a re- us again ind the product of r1 and m1, but this time
lection in the 2-position (in our case, vertex B; see in reverse order:
igure 45.3). We call this combined application of
ABC → ACB → BAC.
two symmetry operations a product and denote it
with a dot. And just as a product of two numbers hat is to say, m1 ⋅ r1 = m3, whereas r1 ⋅ m1 = m2. hus,
gives us a third number, a product of two symmetry r1 ⋅ m1 ≠ m1 ⋅ r1.
operations results in a third symmetry operation. In If you are willing to spend a few more minutes on
the example just given, this amounts to writing this exercise (it may remind you of your daily Su-
r1 ⋅ m1 = m2. doku), you can create a complete “multiplication
151
table” of the six symmetry operations of the equilat- multiply, their product will again be one of the
eral triangle. Here it is: six symmetry operations: you can never go out-
⋅ r1 r2 r3 m1 m2 m3
side this set.
2. Among the members of our set there is one ele-
r1 r2 r3 r1 m2 m3 m1 ment that has the efect of “doing nothing.” his,
r2 r3 r1 r2 m3 m1 m2 of course, reminds us of the number 1 in ordinary
r3 r1 r2 r3 m1 m2 m3 multiplication: 1 ⋅ a = a for any number a. And in-
m1 m3 m2 m1 r3 r2 r1 deed, this particular element, called the unit or
m2 m1 m3 m2 r1 r3 r2 identity element, is r3, the 360° rotation, since it
m3 m2 m1 m3 r2 r1 r3 leaves the triangle in its original position.
3. Just as with numbers, any multiplication in our
Plate 45 shows all 36 entries of this table in a rain-
set can be undone; that is, every element has an
bow display of color. Note that the upper-left and
inverse, whose product with the original element
lower-right quadrants (on gray background) consist
results in the identity element. For example, the
of rotations alone, while the remaining two quad-
inverse of r1 is r2, because r1 ⋅ r2 = r3. he inverse of
rants are pure relections. We can summarize this in
any relection is the same relection again, since
a miniature table:
the mirror image of a mirror image is the original
⋅ r m image: a relection is its own inverse.
r r m 4. If you multiply together three elements, the order
m m r of grouping does not matter; symbolically,
a ⋅ (b ⋅ c) = (a ⋅ b) ⋅ c. his is the associative law, with
Here, r and m stand for rotations and relections of which we are familiar from ordinary arithmetic.
any kind. As this table shows, a succession of two You can convince yourself of the validity of this
rotations or two relections always results in a rota- law by trying a few examples (or, if you have
tion, whereas a rotation and a relection result in a the patience, all 432 = 2 ⋅ 63 possible combina-
relection. You can convince yourself of this when tions); for example, r1 ⋅ (m3 ⋅ r2) = r1 ⋅ m1 = m2, while
looking in the mirror: what you see is not yourself (r1 ⋅ m3) ⋅ r2 = m1 ⋅ r2 = m2: you get the same answer.
but a mirror image of yourself; if you stretch out
Any collection of objects—whatever their nature—
your right hand, your image will respond with its
that fulills these four requirements is called a group.
left hand! To see a true image of yourself, you have
It was this concept that Abel and Galois indepen-
to look at the intersection of two mirrors at right
dently introduced in their quest for a formula for
angles to each other; you will see yourself as some-
solving the general quintic (Galois suggested the
one else sees you.
name). For more than a hundred years the group
Returning to the triangle’s multiplication table,
concept was regarded as a purely abstract creation,
four features about this table are worth noting:
devoid of any practical applications. But with the
1. he table is “closed” in the sense that no matter rise of modern physics in the twentieth century,
which two symmetry operations you choose to group theory suddenly assumed central stage in
45. syMMeTry ii 153
nearly every branch of science, from crystallography which all other groups can be created, in much the
and quantum mechanics to relativity and particle same way as any integer can be created by multiply-
physics. ing together its prime factors. his achievement, the
One of the great accomplishments of modern result of a collaboration of more than 100 mathema-
mathematics was achieved between 1995 and 2004 ticians, has been compared in its importance to the
with the successful classiication of all inite simple discovery half a century earlier of the DNA double
groups—groups with a inite number of elements from helix and the genetic code.
46
The reuleaux Triangle
triangle are always separated by a constant distance ject as their means of transportation, since the circle
r, regardless of where we place them (note that one is regarded by them as a religious icon that should
of these tangent lines will always pass through a not be used for mundane purposes.
vertex). he Reuleaux triangle is but one of a large family
his feature, of course, reminds us of the circle, of constant-breadth curves. It is known that all such
and indeed the two shapes have several properties in curves with the same breadth r also have the same
common. he circumference of the Reuleaux trian- perimeter. Of all the curves in this set, the Reuleaux
gle is πr, the same as the circumference of a circle of triangle has the smallest area, whereas the circle has
diameter r. We can, therefore, regard the radius of the the largest. his remarkable fact was proved in 1916
generating circles as the diameter of the Reuleaux by the Austrian mathematician Wilhelm Blaschke
triangle.1 A Reuleaux triangle will always it into a (1885–1962). hus, the circle and the Reuleaux tri-
square of side r, a fact that inspired Harry James angle occupy the opposite ends of the family of con-
Watt (a descendant of the English inventor James stant-breadth curves.3
Watt of steam engine fame) to issue a patent for a
drill that could cut square holes (well, almost square:
N oT e s :
the corners would still be a bit rounded.)2
Because of its constant width, a Reuleaux triangle 1. his analogy, however, does not extend to the trian-
could be used as a wheel, at least in theory; but a gle’s area, which is (r 2/2)(π − 3 ), compared to that of a
ride on a vehicle using these “wheels” would be any- circle of diameter r, πr 2/4.
thing but smooth, as the axle would wobble up and 2. An animation of this drill can be seen at http://math-
down three times during each revolution (see plate world.wolfram.com/ReuleauxTriangle.html.
46). In Poul Anderson’s science iction story, he 3. More on curves of constant breadth can be found in
hree-Cornered heel (1963), inhabitants of an alien Rademacher and Toeplitz, he Enjoyment of Mathematics,
planet are using a noncircular, constant-width ob- chapter 25.
47
Pick’s Theorem
figure 48.2
48. Morley’s THeoreM 163
holds true for the exterior angles as well. Let the pairs As an additional bonus, the side of Morley’s inter-
of exterior trisectors adjacent to sides AB, BC, and nal triangle is equal to 8r sin(A/3) sin(B/3) sin(C/3),
CA meet at K, L, and M, respectively (igure 48.2); where r is the circumradius of the original triangle
points K, L, and M again form an equilateral trian- and A, B, C are its angles.
gle, shown in purple in the igure. And that’s not all: Plate 48 is a whimsical play on Morley’s theorem,
if we take the intersections of pairs of the remaining in which three key events of his life are alluded to. It
trisectors with the extended sides of this second Mor- shouldn’t be too diicult to decode the meaning of
ley triangle, we get three more equilateral triangles the various symbols shown, so we leave this task to
(shown in red)! Considering that all ive equilateral the reader.
triangles were generated from a single, generic tri-
angle, these results are truly remarkable.
N oT e s :
One may wonder why this jewel of a theorem
hadn’t been discovered earlier. A possible explana- 1. For a proof of Morley’s theorem, see Coxeter, Intro-
tion is that angle trisection is one of the three classi- duction to Geometry, pp. 23–25. Many alternative proofs
cal problems of antiquity that have no solution and related results can be found at the Internet sites listed
using only the Euclidean tools (see chapter 25). in the bibliography.
Consequently, problems involving angle trisection 2. Figures 48.1 and 48.2 are color renditions based on
may have been regarded as of little interest and were, the drawings in Wells, he Penguin Dictionary of Curious
therefore, neglected. and Interesting Geometry, p. 155.
49
The snowlake Curve
figure 49.1
165
figure 50.1
168
ner, the black areas follow the progression 1, 3⁄4, hile we cannot go to ininity in the actual world,
(3⁄4)2, (3⁄4)3, . . ., a geometric progression with the we can get pretty close with a computer, stopping
common ratio 3⁄4. Since this ratio is less than 1, the only when the resolution reaches its limit at the pixel
terms of the progression tend to 0 as n → ∞. So, level. Plate 50 shows the seventh stage of Sierpins-
eventually the original black triangle will become ki’s triangle.
empty, despite the fact that at each stage we removed
only 1⁄4 of each black area.
N oT e s :
On the other hand, the perimeters of the black
triangles follow the sequence 3, 9⁄2, 27⁄4, 81⁄8, . . ., a geo- 1. his biographical sketch is based on the article “Wa-
metric progression with the common ratio 3⁄2. Since claw Sierpinski” by John J. O’Connor and Edmund F.
this ratio is greater than 1, the terms grow without Robertson in he MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive
bound as we keep removing more and more trian- (on the Web), listed in the bibliography.
gles, making the limiting perimeter ininite. hat is 2. he formation of Sierpinski’s triangle can be viewed
to say, the limiting shape—known as Sierpinski’s tri- as an animation at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierpin
angle—has zero area but ininite length! It shows ski_triangle.
again that when ininity comes into play, strange
things always lurk around the corner.2
51
Beyond ininity
inished product. For example, the act of counting 2. he real numbers, on the other hand, are uncount-
the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, . . . can go on forever, yet able—there are ininitely many more of them than
at each stage only a inite number of them have been there are counting numbers or rational numbers.
counted; the complete process can never be inished. hey cannot be put in a 1:1 correspondence with
Cantor thought otherwise: the natural numbers, he any denumerable set; their ininity is of a higher
said, should be regarded as a single, complete ob- rank than that of denumerable sets. Cantor as-
ject, symbolized by enclosing them in braces: {1, 2, signed this kind of ininity the Gothic letter C, the
3, . . .}. In efect, Cantor declared that ininity, far ininity of the continuum. In the hierarchy of in-
from being the elusive goal of a never-ending pro- inities, C > ℵ0.
cess, is a mathematical reality. 3. here exist sets still more numerous than the reals
But this was only the harbinger of things to come. and, therefore, of a higher degree of ininity than
Consider the set of rational numbers. We know that even C. Consider the set of all subsets of a given
between any two fractions, no matter how close, you set—its power set. For example, starting with the
can always squeeze a third fraction. For example, two-element set {a, b}, we can create a new set that
between 1/1,001 and 1/1,000 you can it the fraction has all these elements as subsets: {{a}, {b}, {a, b},
2/2,001 and, indeed, ininitely many more fractions. { }} (note that we included the empty set, { },
he rational numbers, then, are spread densely among the subsets). his new set has 4 = 22 ele-
along the number line, and it would seem only natu- ments. We can now repeat the process with this
ral to assume that there are many more of them than new set, getting a power set of 16 = 24 elements.
counting numbers—ininitely many more. But “nat- he number of subsets in this process grows very
ural” is a very poor guide when it comes to ininity. fast: the next power set will have 216 = 65,536 ele-
In a series of groundbreaking papers published in ments, and the one after that, 265,536 elements, ap-
the decade 1874–1884, Cantor established three re- proximately 1 followed by 19,728 zeros. he pro-
sults that seem to defy common sense: cess can go on forever, generating ever-larger sets
of enormous, yet still inite, size.
1. here are just as many positive rational numbers
as counting numbers; that is to say, we can enlist Cantor now imagined that we can do the same
all positive rationals in a row and count them one with ininite sets, generating a never-ending chain of
by one, without leaving a single one out, as de- power sets, each larger than its predecessor. Each of
picted in plate 51. Cantor called any such set a these sets stands one rung higher on the ladder of
countable, or denumerable, set. he even numbers, ininities. Cantor pointed out that these sets are
the odd numbers, the squares, the primes, and the purely a creation of the mind; they cannot be con-
rational numbers are all denumerable sets: their structed in any “real” sense; they reside in the ethe-
members can be put in a one-to-one correspon- real sphere of abstract mathematics. And yet their
dence with the counting numbers. Cantor de- existence is as real as that of any other mathematical
noted their ininity with the symbol ℵ0, the inin- object, concrete or abstract.1
ity of countable sets (ℵ, pronounced “aleph,” is Cantor’s last years were not happy ones. Stung by
the irst letter of the Hebrew alphabet). the relentless opposition to his radical ideas and suf-
51. BeyoND iNfiNiTy 173
fering from repeated spells of depression, he spent Hold ininity in the palm of your hand,
his inal years in a mental institution, where he died And eternity in an hour
in 1918. Yet his ideas slowly gained acceptance. In a
way, he accomplished the vision of William Blake’s
N oT e :
famous verse in Auguries of Innocence:
1. For a more complete account of Cantor’s theory, see
To see the world in a grain of sand, Maor, To Ininity and Beyond, chapters 9 and 10 (Princeton,
And heaven in a wild lower. NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991).
appendix
P r o o fs o f s eleC T eD TH eo reMs MeNTi o NeD i N THis B ooK
Q ua D r i laT e r a ls (PaG e 6 ) A
herefore,
THe suM o f a Ge o M e T r i C P r o G r e s s i o N terms except −F2 and Fn+2 cancel out. Remembering
(PaGe 5 1 ) that F2 = 1, we thus get
Consider the inite geometric progression a, ar, F1 + F2 + F3 + ⋅⋅⋅ + Fn = Fn+2 − 1.
ar 2, . . ., arn−1 of n terms. Let its sum be S:
A slightly diferent formula holds for the sum of the
S = a + ar + ar 2 + ⋅⋅⋅ + ar n−1. squares of the irst n Fibonacci numbers:
F12 + F22 + F32 + ⋯ + Fn2 = Fn Fn +1 ,
Multiply this equation by the common ratio r:
as can be proved by mathematical induction.
2 3 n Many more Fibonacci-related formulas can be
Sr = ar + ar + ar + ⋅⋅⋅ + ar .
found in Alfred S. Posamentier and Ingmar L.
Subtract the second equation from the irst: all terms Lehmann, he (Fabulous) Fibonacci Numbers (Am-
cancel out except the irst and last: herst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007).
S − Sr = a − ar n
C o N s T r u C T i o N o f a reGular
P e N TaG o N ( PaG e 70)
or S(1 − r) = a(1 − r n), from which we get
We irst show that the 72-72-36-degree triangle
a(1 − r n ) formed by any side of the pentagon and the vertex
S= ,
1−r opposite it has a side-to-base ratio equal to the
golden ratio φ = (1 + 5)/2.
provided, of course that r ≠ 1. Now, if r is less than 1 Let the triangle be ABC, with the 36° angle at C
in absolute value (that is, −1 < r < 1), the term r n gets (igure A.3). Bisect angle A and extend the bisector
smaller and smaller as n increases; that is, r n → 0 as until it meets side BC at D. his produces two isosce-
n → ∞. hus, the sum of the ininite progression is
C
a
S∞ = . 36°
1−r
1
TH e su M o f T H e f i r sT n f i Bo N aC C i
x x
N u M B e r s (PaGe 6 4 )
D
Let F1 = F2 = 1, Fi = Fi−2 + Fi−1 for i = 3, 4, . . . . Note that 72°
1
x -1
F1 = F3 − F2, F2 = F4 − F3, F3 = F5 − F4, . . ., Fn = Fn+2 − Fn+1.
36°
Adding up these expressions, we get, on the left 72° 36° 72°
A B
side, F1 + F2 + F3 + ⋅⋅⋅ + Fn, while on the right side all 1 figure a.3
178 APPENDIX
√ 5/2
1
A 1 B 1/2 P √ 5/2 Q
φ φ
E C
D figure a.4
APPENDIX 179
To construct a pentagon with unit side, we irst gravity of weights WA, WB, and WC attached to the
need to construct a segment equal in length to the respective vertices. Let us ind the center of gravity
golden ratio. Referring to igure A.4, draw a unit of any two of these weights, say WB and WC; call this
line segment AB = 1 , extend it to the right by seg- point A'. By Archimedes’s law of the lever (the “see-
ment BP = 1/2, and at B erect a perpendicular saw rule”), we have
2 2 2
BR = 1. We have PR = BP + BR = (1/2)2 + 12 = 5/4,
so PR = 5/2. Place your compass at P and swing an W B ⋅ BA' = WC ⋅ A'C ,
arc of radius PR , meeting the extended segment AB
at Q. We have from which we get
1 5 (1 + 5) BA' WC
BQ = BP + PQ = + = =ϕ. = .
2 2 2 A'C W B
We are now ready to construct our pentagon. In a similar manner we get for the other two pairs of
Place your compass at B and swing an arc of radius points,
BQ ; then do the same with your compass at A (only CB' W A AC' W B
the irst of these arcs is shown in full in igure A.4). = and = .
B'A WC C'B W A
he two arcs intersect at D. Next, from each of the
points A and D swing an arc of radius AB ; the two
arcs intersect at E (see following note). Do the same
from points B and D, producing point C. Connect C
points A, B, C, D and E, and your pentagon is
complete.
Note: for the arcs to intersect, each radius must be
greater than half the segment. Indeed, AD = BQ =
(1 + 5)/2 ≈ 1.618, so AE = 1 > AD/2 ≈ 0.809, ensur-
A‘
ing that the arcs meet.
B‘
For further discussion and alternative ways to G
construct a pentagon, see Hartshorne, Geometry: Eu-
clid and Beyond, chapter. 4, and Heilbron, Geometry B
Civilized, pp. 221–228.
C‘
C e va’s T H e o r e M (PaG e 1 0 5 )
Let the triangle be ABC (igure A.5), and let A', B',
and C' be any points on the sides opposite to A, B,
and C such that AA', BB', and CC' pass through one
point G. Ceva thought of this point as the center of A figure a.5
180 APPENDIX
Multiplying the three ratios, we get his means that triangles OPQ and OQ'P' are similar.
Since P is the point on l closest to O, line OP is per-
BA' CB' AC' WC W A W B
⋅ ⋅ = ⋅ ⋅ = 1. pendicular to l, so ∆OPQ is a right triangle with its
A'C B'A C'B W B WC W A
right angle at P. herefore, triangle OQ'P' is also a
Note that in forming this triple product, we went in right triangle with its right angle at Q', and this is
a counterclockwise direction around the triangle, true regardless of the position of Q on l. hus, by the
from B to A' to C, then to B', and so on. Since the converse of hales’s theorem (see chapter 1, note 1),
center of gravity G of the entire triangle must lie on as Q moves along l, its image Q' describes an arc of a
each of the lines AA', BB', and CC', it must lie on their circle k with diameter OP'.
intersection, so the three lines are concurrent. Inter- he converse of this property is also true: inver-
estingly, the actual weights disappeared from the sion carries a circle through O onto a line not through
inal result—they just served as a tool and canceled O. his can be seen by simply reading igure A.6
out at the end. “backward,” from circle k to line l. his is a result of
his, of course, is a physically motivated proof
with which a pure mathematician might disagree.
But let us remember that Archimedes, the quint-
essential pure mathematician, often used subtle
physical reasoning in his proofs, yet he always sup-
plemented them with a rigorous mathematical argu-
Q
ment. For a strictly geometric proof, see Eves, A Sur-
vey of Geometry, pp. 247–48.
Q΄
the fact that inversion is completely symmetric: if P' It can also be shown that inversion carries a circle
is the image of P, then P is the image of P', as can be not through O to another circle not through O. For
seen from the equivalence of the deining equations the details, see Courant and Robins, hat is Mathe-
OP' = 1/OP and OP = 1/OP'. matics, pp. 142–144.
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