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#12 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
Quote:
http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/...circle360.html and http://www.wonderquest.com/circle.htm eventually both lead to the apparently authoritative book The Exact Sciences in Antiquity by Otto Neugebauer. Not having Neugebauer's reference at hand, I combined April Halladay's answer at WonderQuest with the eventual answer at MathForum, plus a little of my own, to get (in my wording): In Mesopotamia the Sumerians had, by 2400 BC, a calendar of 12 months of 30 days each. Apparently they valued the arithmetic niceties of the number 360 more than they were irritated by the five-day yearly discrepancy. They also invented the 360-degree circle, but not subdivisions of degrees, which came later. About 1500 BC, Egyptians invented the 24-hour day, but with variable-length hours. Roughly the same time in Mesopotamia, Babylonians invented base-60 arithmetic. Later, Greeks made the hours equal and constant. About 300-100 BC, Babylonians subdivided both the degree and the hour into 60 minutes of 60 seconds each. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2007-03-06 at 15:31 |
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#13 |
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"Phil"
Sep 2002
Tracktown, U.S.A.
3·373 Posts |
I created the graphic with a program called Geometer's Sketchpad which saves its work in the form of a program-specific graphics file. I am able to copy the displayed graphic and paste it into a Word document, but I do not know how to convert it into a format (jpg or gif ?) that I can upload to the forum. Suggestions are welcomed.
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#14 |
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"Mike"
Aug 2002
22·29·71 Posts |
.
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#15 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
That's just what I anticipated!
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#16 |
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"Phil"
Sep 2002
Tracktown, U.S.A.
3·373 Posts |
Thanks for posting that, Mike. I'll try to explain what I found interesting. It was provoked by David's observation of reflection. Suppose we label the vertices consecutively as V1, V2, V3, ... V18. Then what we notice is that the following line segments are all concurrent: V1V7, V2V9, V3V12, and the reflections of the first two segments across the last: V4V15 and V5V17. My guess is that there is some underlying symmetry that explains why these lines are concurrent, but I haven't done much research on it. Could something related to Pascal's theorem be at work here?
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#17 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
Are there other regular polygons with similar
concurrencies of diagonals? David |
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#18 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
194A16 Posts |
A diagram without the diameters might look
more spectacular? |
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#19 |
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"Phil"
Sep 2002
Tracktown, U.S.A.
21378 Posts |
Perhaps, but it is the fact that the intersections of the other diagonals fall directly on those diameters that is of interest.
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#20 | |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
194A16 Posts |
Quote:
which is why removing the diameters (and the trivial symmetric triple intersections) would emphasize what we are trying to illuminate. Last fiddled with by davieddy on 2007-03-07 at 12:18 Reason: omitted closing parenthesis |
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#21 |
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"Phil"
Sep 2002
Tracktown, U.S.A.
3·373 Posts |
But it is the fact that three lines intersect at one point that is interesting, and one of those lines is the diameter.
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#22 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
I'm sure I have a reply to this. Just give me time:)
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