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Eulers Bridge

Eulers bridge concept
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views4 pages

Eulers Bridge

Eulers bridge concept
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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You'd have a hard time finding

Königsberg on any modern maps,

but one particular quirk in its geography

has made it one of the most famous cities


in mathematics.

The medieval German city lay on both sides


of the Pregel River.

At the center were two large islands.

The two islands were connected


to each other and to the river banks

by seven bridges.

Carl Gottlieb Ehler, a mathematician who


later became the mayor of a nearby town,

grew obsessed with these islands


and bridges.

He kept coming back to a single question:

Which route would allow someone


to cross all seven bridges

without crossing any of them


more than once?

Think about it for a moment.

Give up?

You should.

It's not possible.

But attempting to explain why


led famous mathematician Leonhard Euler

to invent a new field of mathematics.


Carl wrote to Euler for help
with the problem.

Euler first dismissed the question as


having nothing to do with math.

But the more he wrestled with it,

the more it seemed there might


be something there after all.

The answer he came up with


had to do with a type of geometry

that did not quite exist yet,


what he called the Geometry of Position,

now known as Graph Theory.

Euler's first insight

was that the route taken between entering


an island or a riverbank and leaving it

didn't actually matter.

Thus, the map could be simplified with


each of the four landmasses

represented as a single point,

what we now call a node,

with lines, or edges, between them


to represent the bridges.

And this simplified graph allows us


to easily count the degrees of each node.

That's the number of bridges


each land mass touches.

Why do the degrees matter?

Well, according to the rules


of the challenge,

once travelers arrive onto a landmass


by one bridge,

they would have to leave it


via a different bridge.

In other words, the bridges leading


to and from each node on any route

must occur in distinct pairs,

meaning that the number of bridges


touching each landmass visited

must be even.

The only possible exceptions would be


the locations of the beginning

and end of the walk.

Looking at the graph, it becomes apparent


that all four nodes have an odd degree.

So no matter which path is chosen,

at some point,
a bridge will have to be crossed twice.

Euler used this proof to formulate


a general theory

that applies to all graphs with two


or more nodes.

A Eulerian path
that visits each edge only once

is only possible in one of two scenarios.

The first is when there are exactly


two nodes of odd degree,

meaning all the rest are even.

There, the starting point is one


of the odd nodes,

and the end point is the other.

The second is when all the nodes


are of even degree.

Then, the Eulerian path will start


and stop in the same location,

which also makes it something called


a Eulerian circuit.

So how might you create a Eulerian path


in Königsberg?

It's simple.

Just remove any one bridge.

And it turns out, history created


a Eulerian path of its own.

During World War II, the Soviet Air Force


destroyed two of the city's bridges,
making a Eulerian path easily possible.

Though, to be fair, that probably


wasn't their intention.

These bombings pretty much wiped


Königsberg off the map,

and it was later rebuilt


as the Russian city of Kaliningrad.

So while Königsberg and her seven bridges


may not be around anymore,

they will be remembered throughout


history by the seemingly trivial riddle

which led to the emergence of


a whole new field of mathematics.

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