+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Ch. 9: Symmetry and Optimization!

Ch. 9: Symmetry and Optimization!

Date post: 25-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: doli
View: 21 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Ch. 9: Symmetry and Optimization!. What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?. What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?. Is this the only solution?. What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?. Is this the only solution? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
35
Ch. 9: Symmetry and Optimization!
Transcript
Page 1: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Ch. 9: Symmetry and Optimization!

Page 2: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Page 3: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

Page 4: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the cube gives you a picture of another solution.

Page 5: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the cube gives you a picture of another solution.

THUS, there are 4 solutions which are permuted By the symmetries of the cube!

Page 6: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the cube gives you a picture of another solution.

THUS, there are 4 solutions which are permuted By the symmetries of the cube!

What is the largest cube that fits in a dodecahedron?

Page 7: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the cube gives you a picture of another solution.

THUS, there are 4 solutions which are permuted By the symmetries of the cube!

What is the largest cube that fits in a dodecahedron?Is this the only solution?

Page 8: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What is the longest stick that fits in this cubical box?

Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the cube gives you a picture of another solution.

THUS, there are 4 solutions which are permuted By the symmetries of the cube!

What is the largest cube that fits in a dodecahedron?Is this the only solution?

NO! Performing any symmetry of the dodecahedron gives you a picture of another solution.

THUS, there are 5 solutions which are permuted By the symmetries of the dodecahedron!

Page 9: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

The solution to an optimization problem often has the samesymmetries as the problem.

When it does not, there must be multiple “tied” solutions that are permuted by the symmetries of the problem.

Page 10: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Why are bubbles spherical?

Page 11: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Why are bubbles spherical?

Why are honeycombs hexagonal?

Page 12: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Why are bubbles spherical?

Why are honeycombs hexagonal?

An icosahedral HIV virus

Why are many viruses icosahedral?

Page 13: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Why are bubbles spherical?

Why are honeycombs hexagonal?

An icosahedral HIV virus

Why are many viruses icosahedral?

Nature’s solutions to optimizationproblems are often highly symmetric!

Page 14: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Why are bubbles spherical?

The Bubble Theorem: The sphere is the least-surface-area way to enclose a given volume.

Nature’s solutions to optimizationproblems are often highly symmetric!

Page 15: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What optimization problem is nature solving here?

Does each bubble surface have the same symmetries as its frame?

Page 16: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

What optimization problem is nature solving here?

Does the bubble surface have the same symmetries as its frame?

Page 17: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

To enclose 25 acres of grassland using the least possible length of fencing, in what shape should you build your fence?

Page 18: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

Page 19: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

We wish to prove that Farmer Don’s winning fence is a circle, but for all we know now, it could have a crazy shape like this.

Page 20: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

The horizontal line which is chosen to divide its area in half will automatically also divide its perimeter in half. Why?

Page 21: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

The horizontal line which is chosen to divide its area in half will automatically also divide its perimeter in half. Why?

(If say the top had more perimeter, then replacing the top with the reflection of the bottom would enclose 25 acres using less fence, contradicting the assumption that the original shape was the best.)

Page 22: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Replacing the top with the reflection of the bottomproduces a TIED WINNER (with at least 2 symmetries).

(same area andsame perimeter)

Page 23: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

The vertical line which is chosen to divide its area in half will automatically also divide its perimeter in half.

Page 24: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Replacing the right with the reflection of the leftproduces a TIED WINNER (with at least 4 symmetries).

(same area andsame perimeter)

Page 25: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Summary: Starting with a winner, you can build a tied winner with at least four symmetries: I, H, V, R180.

Why is this a symmetry?

Page 26: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Claim 1: Every line through the centerdivides the area and perimeter in half.

Because R180 is a symmetry thatexchanges the two sides of the line.

Page 27: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Claim 2: Every line through the centermeets the fence at right angles.

Why is a non-right angle like this impossible?

Page 28: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Claim 2: Every line through the centermeets the fence at right angles.

Why is a non-right angle like this impossible?

Because replacing one side with the reflection of the other would produce something impossible: a winner with an “innie-point”.

Page 29: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

Summary: Starting with a winner, you can build a tied winner which(unlike in this picture) meets every line through the origin at right angles.

Page 30: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

BRAINSTORM: Think of fence shapes thatmeet every radial line at right angles.

Page 31: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

BRAINSTORM: Think of fence shapes thatMeet every radial line at right angles.

THE CIRCLE IS THE ONLY POSSIBILITY!

so the tied winner must be a circle

Page 32: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

PROOF: Farmer Don found the least-perimeter possible way to enclose the given area (say 25 acres).

BRAINSTORM: Think of fence shapes thatMeet every radial line at right angles.

THE CIRCLE IS THE ONLY POSSIBILITY!

so the tied winner must be a circle

So this mustbe a quarter-circle

(and similarly for theother 3 quadrants)

Page 33: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

Related question: why are bubbles spherical?

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

Page 34: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE BUBBLE THEOREM: The sphere is the least-surface-area way to enclose a given volume.

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

Related question: why are bubbles spherical?

Page 35: Ch. 9:  Symmetry and Optimization!

THE BUBBLE THEOREM: The sphere is the least-surface-area way to enclose a given volume.

THE CIRCLE THEOREM: The circle is the least-perimeter way to enclose a given area in the plane.

THE DOUBLE BUBBLE PROBLEM: What is the least-surface-area way to enclose and separate two (possibly different) volumes?

What bubblesdo when they

colide

Another mathematical

possibility

Which is best?

Related question: why are bubbles spherical?


Recommended