In mathematics, the plastic ratio is a geometrical proportion close to 53/40. Its true value is the real solution of the equation x3 = x + 1.
Rationality | irrational algebraic |
---|---|
Symbol | ρ |
Representations | |
Decimal | 1.3247179572447460259609088...[1] |
Algebraic form | real root of x3 = x + 1 |
Continued fraction (linear) | [1;3,12,1,1,3,2,3,2,4,2,141,80,...] [2] not periodic infinite |
The adjective plastic does not refer to the artificial material, but to the formative and sculptural qualities of this ratio, as in plastic arts.
Definition
editThree quantities a > b > c > 0 are in the plastic ratio if
- .
The ratio is commonly denoted
Let and , then
.
It follows that the plastic ratio is found as the unique real solution of the cubic equation The decimal expansion of the root begins as (sequence A060006 in the OEIS).
Solving the equation with Cardano's formula,
or, using the hyperbolic cosine,[3]
is the superstable fixed point of the iteration .
The iteration results in the continued reciprocal square root
Dividing the defining trinomial by one obtains , and the conjugate elements of are
with and
Properties
editThe plastic ratio and golden ratio are the only morphic numbers: real numbers x > 1 for which there exist natural numbers m and n such that
- and .[4]
Morphic numbers can serve as basis for a system of measure.
Properties of (m=3 and n=4) are related to those of (m=2 and n=1). For example, The plastic ratio satisfies the continued radical
- ,
while the golden ratio satisfies the analogous
The plastic ratio can be expressed in terms of itself as the infinite geometric series
- and
in comparison to the golden ratio identity
- and vice versa.
Additionally, , while
For every integer one has
The algebraic solution of a reduced quintic equation can be written in terms of square roots, cube roots and the Bring radical. If then . Since
Continued fraction pattern of a few low powers
- (25/33)
- (45/34)
- (58/33)
- (79/34)
- (40/13)
- (53/13) ...
- (93/13) ...
- (88/7)
The plastic ratio is the smallest Pisot number.[5] Because the absolute value of the algebraic conjugates is smaller than 1, powers of generate almost integers. For example: After 29 rotation steps the phases of the inward spiraling conjugate pair – initially close to – nearly align with the imaginary axis.
The minimal polynomial of the plastic ratio has discriminant . The Hilbert class field of imaginary quadratic field can be formed by adjoining . With argument a generator for the ring of integers of , one has the special value of Dedekind eta quotient
- .[6]
Expressed in terms of the Weber-Ramanujan class invariant Gn
- .[7]
Properties of the related Klein j-invariant result in near identity . The difference is < 1/12659.
The elliptic integral singular value[8] for has closed form expression
(which is less than 1/3 the eccentricity of the orbit of Venus).
Van der Laan sequence
editIn his quest for perceptible clarity, the Dutch Benedictine monk and architect Dom Hans van der Laan (1904-1991) asked for the minimum difference between two sizes, so that we will clearly perceive them as distinct. Also, what is the maximum ratio of two sizes, so that we can still relate them and perceive nearness. According to his observations, the answers are 1/4 and 7/1, spanning a single order of size.[9] Requiring proportional continuity, he constructed a geometric series of eight measures (types of size) with common ratio 2 / (3/4 + 1/71/7) ≈ ρ. Put in rational form, this architectonic system of measure is constructed from a subset of the numbers that bear his name.
The Van der Laan numbers have a close connection to the Perrin and Padovan sequences. In combinatorics, the number of compositions of n into parts 2 and 3 is counted by the nth Van der Laan number.
The Van der Laan sequence is defined by the third-order recurrence relation
- for n > 2,
with initial values
- .
The first few terms are 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 12, 16, 21, 28, 37, 49, 65, 86,... (sequence A182097 in the OEIS). The limit ratio between consecutive terms is the plastic ratio.
k | n - m | | err | interval |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 3 - 3 | 1 /1 | 0 | minor element |
1 | 8 - 7 | 4 /3 | 1/116 | major element |
2 | 10 - 8 | 7 /4 | -1/205 | minor piece |
3 | 10 - 7 | 7 /3 | 1/116 | major piece |
4 | 7 - 3 | 3 /1 | -1/12 | minor part |
5 | 8 - 3 | 4 /1 | -1/12 | major part |
6 | 13 - 7 | 16 /3 | -1/14 | minor whole |
7 | 10 - 3 | 7 /1 | -1/6 | major whole |
The first 14 indices n for which is prime are n = 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 16, 21, 32, 39, 86, 130, 471, 668, 1264 (sequence A112882 in the OEIS).[a] The last number has 154 decimal digits.
The sequence can be extended to negative indices using
- .
The generating function of the Van der Laan sequence is given by
- for [10]
The sequence is related to sums of binomial coefficients by
- .[11]
The characteristic equation of the recurrence is . If the three solutions are real root and conjugate pair and , the Van der Laan numbers can be computed with the Binet formula [11]
- , with real and conjugates and the roots of .
Since and , the number is the nearest integer to , with n > 1 and 0.3106288296404670777619027...
Coefficients result in the Binet formula for the related sequence .
The first few terms are 3, 0, 2, 3, 2, 5, 5, 7, 10, 12, 17, 22, 29, 39, 51, 68, 90, 119,... (sequence A001608 in the OEIS).
This Perrin sequence has the Fermat property: if p is prime, . The converse does not hold, but the small number of pseudoprimes makes the sequence special.[12] The only 7 composite numbers below 108 to pass the test are n = 271441, 904631, 16532714, 24658561, 27422714, 27664033, 46672291.[13]
The Van der Laan numbers are obtained as integral powers n > 2 of a matrix with real eigenvalue [10]
The trace of gives the Perrin numbers.
Alternatively, can be interpreted as incidence matrix for a D0L Lindenmayer system on the alphabet with corresponding substitution rule
and initiator . The series of words produced by iterating the substitution have the property that the number of c's, b's and a's are equal to successive Van der Laan numbers. Their lengths are
Associated to this string rewriting process is a set composed of three overlapping self-similar tiles called the Rauzy fractal, that visualizes the combinatorial information contained in a multiple-generation letter sequence.[14]
Geometry
editThere are precisely three ways of partitioning a square into three similar rectangles:[15][16]
- The trivial solution given by three congruent rectangles with aspect ratio 3:1.
- The solution in which two of the three rectangles are congruent and the third one has twice the side lengths of the other two, where the rectangles have aspect ratio 3:2.
- The solution in which the three rectangles are all of different sizes and where they have aspect ratio ρ2. The ratios of the linear sizes of the three rectangles are: ρ (large:medium); ρ2 (medium:small); and ρ3 (large:small). The internal, long edge of the largest rectangle (the square's fault line) divides two of the square's four edges into two segments each that stand to one another in the ratio ρ. The internal, coincident short edge of the medium rectangle and long edge of the small rectangle divides one of the square's other, two edges into two segments that stand to one another in the ratio ρ4.
The fact that a rectangle of aspect ratio ρ2 can be used for dissections of a square into similar rectangles is equivalent to an algebraic property of the number ρ2 related to the Routh–Hurwitz theorem: all of its conjugates have positive real part.[17][18]
The circumradius of the snub icosidodecadodecahedron for unit edge length is
- .[19]
Rho-squared rectangle
editGiven a rectangle of height 1, length and diagonal length (according to ). The triangles on the diagonal have altitudes each perpendicular foot divides the diagonal in ratio .
On the left-hand side, cut off a square of side length 1 and mark the intersection with the falling diagonal. The remaining rectangle now has aspect ratio (according to ). Divide the original rectangle into four parts by a second, horizontal cut passing through the intersection point.[20]
The parent rho-squared rectangle and the two scaled copies along the diagonal have linear sizes in the ratios The areas of the rectangles opposite the diagonal are both equal to , with aspect ratios (below) and (above).
If the diagram is further subdivided by perpendicular lines through the feet of the altitudes, the lengths of the diagonal and its (thus far) seven distinct subsections are in ratios where corresponds to the span between both feet.
Nested rho-squared rectangles with diagonal lengths in ratios converge at distance from the intersection point. This is equal to the unique positive node that optimizes cubic Lagrange interpolation on the interval [−1,1]. With optimal node set T = {−1,−t, t, 1}, the Lebesgue function evaluates to the minimal cubic Lebesgue constant at critical point [21] Since , this is also the distance from the point of convergence to the upper left vertex.
Plastic spiral
editA plastic spiral is a logarithmic spiral that gets wider by a factor of for every quarter turn. It is described by the polar equation with initial radius and parameter If drawn on a rectangle with sides in ratio , the spiral has its pole at the foot of altitude of a triangle on the diagonal and passes through vertices of rectangles with aspect ratio which are orthogonally aligned and successively scaled by a factor
In 1838 Henry Moseley noticed that whorls of a shell of the chambered nautilus are in geometrical progression: "It will be found that the distance of any two of its whorls measured upon a radius vector is one-third that of the next two whorls measured upon the same radius vector ... The curve is therefore a logarithmic spiral."[22] Moseley thus gave the expansion rate for a quarter turn.[b]
Considering the plastic ratio a three-dimensional equivalent of the ubiquitous golden ratio, it appears to be a natural candidate for measuring the shell.[c]
History and names
editρ was first studied by Axel Thue in 1912 and by G. H. Hardy in 1919.[5] French high school student Gérard Cordonnier discovered the ratio for himself in 1924. In his correspondence with Hans van der Laan a few years later, he called it the radiant number (French: le nombre radiant). Van der Laan initially referred to it as the fundamental ratio (Dutch: de grondverhouding), using the plastic number (Dutch: het plastische getal) from the 1950s onward.[24] In 1944 Carl Siegel showed that ρ is the smallest possible Pisot–Vijayaraghavan number and suggested naming it in honour of Thue.
Unlike the names of the golden and silver ratios, the word plastic was not intended by van der Laan to refer to a specific substance, but rather in its adjectival sense, meaning something that can be given a three-dimensional shape.[25] This, according to Richard Padovan, is because the characteristic ratios of the number, 3/4 and 1/7, relate to the limits of human perception in relating one physical size to another. Van der Laan designed the 1967 St. Benedictusberg Abbey church to these plastic number proportions.[26]
The plastic number is also sometimes called the silver number, a name given to it by Midhat J. Gazalé[27] and subsequently used by Martin Gardner,[28] but that name is more commonly used for the silver ratio 1 + √2, one of the ratios from the family of metallic means first described by Vera W. de Spinadel. Gardner suggested referring to ρ2 as "high phi", and Donald Knuth created a special typographic mark for this name, a variant of the Greek letter phi ("φ") with its central circle raised, resembling the Georgian letter pari ("Ⴔ").
See also
edit- Solutions of equations similar to :
- Golden ratio – the only positive solution of the equation
- Supergolden ratio – the only real solution of the equation
Notes
edit- ^ Vn = Pa n+3
- ^ For a typical 8" nautilus shell the difference in diameter between the apertures of perfect 31/4 and ρ−sized specimens is about 1 mm. Allowing for phenotypic plasticity, they may well be indistinguishable.
- ^ An alternative is the omega constant 0.567143... which satisfies Ω⋅exp(Ω) = 1. Resembling φ (φ−1) = 1, Mathworld suggests it is like a "golden ratio for exponentials".[23] The interval 31/4 < ρ < Ω−1/2 is smaller than 0.012.
References
edit- ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A060006". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
- ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A072117". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
- ^ Tabrizian, Peyam (2022). "What is the plastic ratio?". YouTube. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
- ^ Aarts, Jan; Fokkink, Robbert; Kruijtzer, Godfried (2001). "Morphic numbers" (PDF). Nieuw Archief voor Wiskunde. 5. 2 (1): 56–58. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
- ^ a b Panju, Maysum (2011). "A systematic construction of almost integers" (PDF). The Waterloo Mathematics Review. 1 (2): 35–43. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Plastic constant". MathWorld.
- ^ Ramanujan G-function
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Elliptic integral singular value". MathWorld.
- ^ Voet, Caroline [in Dutch] (2019). "1:7 and a series of 8". The digital study room of Dom Hans van der Laan. Van der Laan Foundation. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- ^ a b (sequence A182097 in the OEIS)
- ^ a b (sequence A000931 in the OEIS)
- ^ Adams, William; Shanks, Daniel (1982). "Strong primality tests that are not sufficient". Math. Comp. 39 (159). AMS: 255–300. doi:10.2307/2007637. JSTOR 2007637.
- ^ (sequence A013998 in the OEIS)
- ^ Siegel, Anne; Thuswaldner, Jörg M. (2009). "Topological properties of Rauzy fractals". Mémoires de la Société Mathématique de France. 2. 118: 1–140. doi:10.24033/msmf.430.
- ^ Stewart, Ian (1996). "Tales of a neglected number". Scientific American. 274 (6): 102–103. Bibcode:1996SciAm.274f.102S. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0696-102. Archived from the original on 2012-03-20. Feedback in: Stewart, Ian (1996). "A guide to computer dating". Scientific American. 275 (5): 118. Bibcode:1996SciAm.275e.116S. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1196-116.
- ^ Spinadel, Vera W. de; Redondo Buitrago, Antonia (2009), "Towards van der Laan's plastic number in the plane" (PDF), Journal for Geometry and Graphics, 13 (2): 163–175
- ^ Freiling, C.; Rinne, D. (1994), "Tiling a square with similar rectangles", Mathematical Research Letters, 1 (5): 547–558, doi:10.4310/MRL.1994.v1.n5.a3, MR 1295549
- ^ Laczkovich, M.; Szekeres, G. (1995), "Tilings of the square with similar rectangles", Discrete & Computational Geometry, 13 (3–4): 569–572, doi:10.1007/BF02574063, MR 1318796
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Snub icosidodecadodecahedron". MathWorld.
- ^ Analogue to the construction in: Crilly, Tony (1994). "A supergolden rectangle". The Mathematical Gazette. 78 (483): 320–325. doi:10.2307/3620208. JSTOR 3620208.
- ^ Rack, Heinz-Joachim (2013). "An example of optimal nodes for interpolation revisited". In Anastassiou, George A.; Duman, Oktay (eds.). Advances in applied Mathematics and Approximation Theory 2012. Springer Proceedings in Mathematics and Statistics. Vol. 41. pp. 117–120. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6393-1. ISBN 978-1-4614-6393-1.
- ^ Moseley, Henry (1838). "On the Geometrical Forms of Turbinated and Discoid Shells". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 128: 351–370 [355–356]. doi:10.1098/rstl.1838.0018.
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Omega constant". MathWorld.
- ^ Voet 2016, note 12.
- ^ Shannon, A. G.; Anderson, P. G.; Horadam, A. F. (2006). "Properties of Cordonnier, Perrin and Van der Laan numbers". International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. 37 (7): 825–831. doi:10.1080/00207390600712554. S2CID 119808971.
- ^ Padovan, Richard (2002), "Dom Hans van der Laan and The plastic number", Nexus IV: Architecture and Mathematics, Fucecchio (Florence): Kim Williams Books: 181–193.
- ^ Gazalé, Midhat J. (1999). "Chapter VII: The silver number". Gnomon: From Pharaohs to Fractals. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 135–150.
- ^ Gardner, Martin (2001). "Six challenging dissection tasks" (PDF). A Gardner's Workout. Natick, MA: A K Peters. pp. 121–128. (Link to the 1994 Quantum article without Gardner's Postscript.)
Further reading
edit- Laan, van der, Hans (1960), Le nombre plastique, Quinze leçons sur l'ordonnance architectonique, Leiden: Brill.
- Padovan, Richard; Eck, Caroline van; Scheepmaker, H.J. (1994), Dom Hans van der Laan: Modern Primitive, Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura.
- Voet, Caroline [in Dutch] (2016), "Between Looking and Making: Unravelling Dom Hans van der Laan's Plastic Number", Architectural Histories, 4 (1), London: European Architectural History Network.
External links
edit- Plastic rectangle and Padovan sequence at Tartapelago by Giorgio Pietrocola.
- The digital study room of Dom Hans van der Laan at The Van der Laan Archives.
- Harriss, Edmund (15 March 2019), "The Plastic Ratio" (video), youtube, Brady Haran, archived from the original on 2021-12-21, retrieved 15 March 2019.