Monthly Maths
Transcription
Monthly Maths
Monthly Maths I s s u e Maths and Art The Mathematical Art Of M.C. Escher: 4 minute video extract from a BBC documentary about the relationship between maths and art as explored by Escher. Escher's Tessellations: 6 minute video compiled by a teacher who says: “Nothing fancy. Just needed something to play while my students were working on their tessellation project.” You might find it similarly useful. NRICH has a section on Maurits Cornelius Escher. 3 0 Tessellations www.mei.org.uk S e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 3 Tessellations in everyday life The word "tessellate" is derived from the Ionic version of the Greek word "tesseres," which in English means "four." Tessellations are also sometimes known as tilings, but the word "tilings" usually refers to patterns of polygons (i.e. shapes with straight boundaries), which is a more restrictive category of repeating patterns. ‘Tessellations’ illustrates examples in art, nature, food and everyday life, and could provide a useful starting point for the topic. Types of tessellation: Regular – comprised of one type of regular polygon, for example: Semi-regular – comprised of more than one type of regular polygon and with the same polygon arrangement at every vertex, for example: Demi-regular - comprised of more than one type of regular polygon and with two or three different polygon arrangements, for example: Beyond - comprised of more than one type of regular polygon and with unlimited polygon arrangements Click here for the MEI Maths Item of the Month Totally Tessellated is a site produced as a student competition entry, and is a helpful and interesting resource providing a basic introduction into the complex world of tessellations and tilings. The site authors explain the role tessellations have had in history and in cultures around the world. The site provides background information about Polygons and Angles, Symmetry and Transformations, Tessellations and Colour Usage. The use of regular and semi-regular polygons in creating simple tessellations is explored, and simple tessellations with non-regular polygons are investigated. One section looks in depth at mosaics and tilings, exploring tessellations of polygons with small numbers of sides: triangles, quadrilaterals, pentagons, and hexagons. A new MEI teaching resource is at the end of this bulletin. Click here to download it from our website. Disclaimer: This newsletter provides links to other Internet sites for the convenience of users. MEI is not responsible for the availability or content of these external sites, nor does MEI endorse or guarantee the products, services, or information described or offered at these other Internet sites. Classroom activities Explore Escher A YouTube video tutorial, How to Create a Tessellation, demonstrates how to create a tessellated pattern by drawing shapes using either geometric or organic lines, then cutting out and sliding the shapes to form tessellations. This could form the basis of some enrichment work for your students, especially if you include Paul Giganti’s excellent videos: Anatomy of an Escher Lizard and Anatomy of an Escher Flying Horse as inspiration. On the website Encyclopedia.com, Dana Mackenzie’s article Making Tessellations explains how to create an Escherstyle tessellation using translation, reflection and rotation. She also describes the “kaleidoscope method”. Tessellation Tutorials Suzanne Alejandre has published a section of tessellation tutorial pages in The Math Forum. These tutorials and templates for making your own tessellations include the use of software (which has probably been superseded by more sophisticated software) as well as Tessellating with only a Straightedge and Compass. There are examples to view of tessellations produced by students. The section of tessellations from Hawaii of is particularly interesting in that it uses ancient Hawaiian designs as inspiration, such as this design, Birds of Paradise. Another group of students, this time from New Jersey, had fun in 2004 using software to create a tessellation in the shape of an animal, an object, or a person, then writing a poem to accompany their work. Click on each tessellation of the Student Tessellations page to view it in close up and to read the poem. Tessellations for Teachers Jo Edkins has written a comprehensive set of web pages called Tessellations for Teachers that include a grids webpage showing clearly how tessellations can be built up, and the importance of colour in creating such patterns. This is quite basic stuff, but full of useful resources such as grids to download of single and multiple regular shapes, and of irregular shapes. As Jo warns, ‘However, the grids provide no discipline to stop children colouring them in any old how… So there are interactive pages which provide this tessellation discipline.’ See for example: Design a tessellation online (square grid). Jo also provides instructions for how you can download, copy, save and print off the resulting tessellations. An Australian teacher has created a Wiki that includes resources for teaching about tessellations; although these are targeted at the equivalent of upper primary level, you may find some of these useful to adapt for your own lessons. Using software to create tessellations This video tutorial, How to Create a Tessellation Out of a Regular Triangle, demonstrates how to create a tessellation out of a regular triangle using a computer program such as Power Point or Paint. The resulting shape can be printed, cut out and used as a stencil to create a poster. It’s quite a slow-paced tutorial, but could be used by students for independent work, as it includes a list of steps at the end of the demonstration. Another video demonstrates step by step how to create rotational tessellations with GeoGebra. Further investigations Letter Tessellations In 1986 Scott Kim constructed a Tessellating Alphabet, where each letter fits together with copies of itself to tile the plane, using a ‘wide range of types of tessellations, with different symmetries and different degrees of difficulty’. Click each letter of the alphabet to see how it tessellates. Can you think how he might have tessellated the letter J? Ask students to explore different ways of tiling. letters of the alphabet; can they design tessellating uppercase letters to go with the lower case? Puzzling Typography: Mazes with Letter Tessellations has 84 mazes constructed only from patterns of tessellating letters. Both Wolfram MathWorld and NRICH use interactive resources to investigate Napoleon's Theorem. Napoleon's theorem states that if equilateral triangles are constructed on the sides of any triangle, either all outward, or all inward, the centres of those equilateral triangles themselves form an equilateral triangle. In her Plus Magazine article From quasicrystals to Kleenex, Alison Boyle looks at complex geometric designs such as those used in Alhambra tilings. She also looks at the creation of sets of tiles that will tile only aperiodically (so that the pattern never repeats itself), including those invented by Oxford professor Sir Roger Penrose. You can also read about the disrespectful use of his rhomb design caused Sir Roger to sue Kimberley Clark back in 1997! If you want to find out more about Sir Roger Penrose, in the article A Knight on the Tiles he talks to Helen Joyce from the Plus team about his ideas. Incidentally, Sir Roger Penrose is giving a talk about crystal symmetry in mathematics and architecture at the Royal Institution on Wednesday 18 September 2013 – visit the Royal Institution website for more details. The IMA has developed a Large Maths Outreach and Careers Kit containing the Penrose Tiles, available for loan. The kit was created for outreach work with schools. Matt Parker demonstrates the Penrose Tiles in this short video. In Secrets from a bathroom floor, Josefina Alvarez and Cesar L. Garcia investigate the precise art of tiling and the challenges of producing tilings for bathroom floors, and suggest some ‘what ifs’ as follow up. Congruent pentagons were used in this unusual floor tiling of the headquarters of the Mathematical Association of America. Craig Kaplan’s article The trouble with five explains why you won’t find pentagons used in regular tiling patterns. Tiles in the shape of regular pentagons, with all five sides and interior angles equal, inevitably leave gaps when used to cover a surface. In contrast, regular hexagons do cover the plane. The article examines how a set of shapes with five-fold symmetry might together tile the Euclidean plane. For example, if we introduce another shape, will that resolve the ‘five-fold tiling problem’ or will it just ‘buy us some time before we get stuck again’? And if we move from a flat plane to a sphere, such as a football, does it become easier to tile its surface? Structural tessellations In the video Origami Tessellations, Tung Ken Lam showed how to fold a basic origami tessellation in his session at the 2012 Association of Teachers of Mathematics Conference. It’s interesting to see what folded products can be made from a square of paper. This may be a basic fold, but it’s definitely not one for beginners! Some spectacular examples by Yoshi – Paper Artist from Venezuela are shown on the Origami Tessellations site. More examples of Yoshi’s amazing work are available on his Flickr site. Absolute Astronomy’s page on Tessellation provides a useful overview of the topic of tessellations of other spaces. Honeycomb morphology The web page Structural tessellations and morphologies tells us that “honeycomb structures have become a very popular subject and feature in architectural design”. This is because “the most efficient use of materials in a two-dimensional space is done by tessellating hexagonal parts and not triangular ones, hexagonal structures/ domes have since been developed utilizing some additional structural support.” Software is used to develop linear honeycomb structures into more complex forms, both in two and three dimensions and in planar. In planar tessellations, each hexagon of different size follows a plane of an underlying form. Honeycomb morphology can involve all the dimensions. Read more about honeycomb morphology in this report about a 2004 architecture research project. Building with tessellations A tessellated roof is one of the most flexible framed systems to design, the measurements and precision are complex and commonly part of a computer-aided design process of production. In this architect’s blog you can read about challenges faced in the design of buildings using tessellations. The Eden Project was designed by Architect Nicholas Grimshaw and Structural Engineer Anthony Hunt in 2011. The Eden Project biomes use an unusual tetrahedral-truss, which requires little additional material and results in a remarkably thin dome. Geodesic dome construction The word “geodesic” refers to the shortest distance between two points on a curved surface. Wolfram MathWorld describes a geodesic dome as “a triangulation of a Platonic solid or other polyhedron to produce a close approximation to a sphere (or hemisphere).” HowStuffWorks describes geodesic domes more simply: “In short, geodesic domes are structures that look like half spheres made up of many triangle supports” in their article: How Geodesic Domes Work. Stephen Luttrell looks at how to automate the design of geodesic domes using Mathematica, with the dome at the Eden Project as his focus. Domerama.com explores how the biomes at the Eden Project were designed and constructed. Domerama.com’s web page: Sketchup 3D Geodesic Models lists over 70 geodesic dome models created with free 3D modelling software Google Sketchup. An example of a geodesic tessellation of an icosahedron is the Equal-edge Goldberg Polyhedron.The radii of vertices-to-spherecentre vary slightly to achieve planar faces. Tangrams Tangram Table Massimo Morozzi, an Italian designer, created the Tangram Table in 1983. It is essentially a larger counterpart of the regular tangram pieces. The Tangram Table is made of up the seven separate shapes, with specially designed legs that enable the tans to stand up. Tangrams A tangram is an ancient Chinese moving piece puzzle, consisting of 7 pieces (‘tans’) made using 3 basic geometric shapes: 2 large, 1 medium and 2 small triangles, 1 square and 1 parallelogram. The classic rules are as follows: You must use all 7 tans, they must lay flat, they must touch and none may overlap. Wikipedia defines the tans in greater detail: “... the seven pieces are: 2 large right triangles (hypotenuse , sides , area ) 1 medium right triangle (hypotenuse , sides , area ) 2 small right triangle (hypotenuse Then they can be arranged into the varied shapes possible as with the traditional tangram - you can see some of the arrangements on the deconet website. , sides , area ) 1 square (sides , area ) 1 parallelogram (sides of and , area ) “Of these seven pieces, the parallelogram is unique in that it has no reflection symmetry but only rotational symmetry, and so its mirror image can be obtained only by flipping it over. Thus, it is the only piece that may need to be flipped when forming certain shapes.” There has been some debate over the origin of the name ‘tangram’. It was possibly derived from the word trangram meaning a puzzle or trinket, or perhaps tá ng (the Chinese dynasty) and gram, Greek for 'writing'. Another possibility is that it derives from tá ng tú , with tú meaning a picture or diagram. In 1903, American Sam Loyd , known by Martin Gardiner as "America's greatest puzzler", wrote his great spoof of tangram history, The Eighth Book of Tan. This included an extensive, but bogus history of the puzzle that claimed that it was 4,000 years old and had been invented by the god Tan. Despite this fictitious claim the book did include seven hundred unique Tangram designs. The tangram obtained admirers such as Edgar Allen Poe, Lewis Carroll, Thomas Edison, and Napoleon. Tangrams (also known as Chinese puzzles) were also popular pastimes during World War I, in the trenches of both sides. Class activities Paradoxes Puzzles.com’s tangram puzzles include a handson tangram page with an illustration of two monks, developed by Henry E. Dudeney, demonstrating a paradox. Both men are assembled with all the seven tans, but one of them has a foot, while the other hasn't. Can your students explain why this is? The blog "Restless Minds" shows the solution. Another paradox is the Magic Dice Cup tangram – from Sam Loyd’s book Eighth Book of Tan. Each of these cups was composed using the same seven geometric shapes, but the first cup is whole, and the others contain vacancies of different sizes. Can your students think up any more tangram paradoxes? Puzzles and games The Centre for Innovation in Mathematics Teaching (CIMT) Mathematics Enhancement Programme has a section on tangrams that includes instructions for making a set of tangram pieces, and several puzzles to work through. Here’s the link to the first puzzle page; links to the next page are at the bottom of each page. Included on puzzle page 4 is the two monks paradox mentioned left. The Puzzles Index page has links to some answers, while educational institutions can apply to CIMT for access to others via their web page. Tangrams.ca lists tangram games and generators to download, including Canvas Tangrams. You can download your own copy; the link is on the right at the bottom of the page. SUMS Mathematics has a free Flash tangram game with short (4 shapes) and long (10 shapes) games available to play online. The Stomachion This consists of 14 tiles forming a 12x12 unit square, where each tile's area is a whole number. As with its cousin the tangram, the object of the Stomachion is to rearrange the pieces to form interesting shapes. It is not known whether Archimedes developed the Stomachion, though the puzzle was definitely known by the ancient Greeks. Because he wrote about the puzzle extensively, however, it is also known as Archimedes' Puzzle or the Loculus of Archimedes. Puzzles.com has a useful page about the Stomachion, as does WolframMathWorld. There is also a printable resource that includes the Stomachion shapes. The National Council for Teaching of Mathematics (NCTM) has a lesson plan for teaching about the Stomachion, including activity sheets and extension work. Crafstmanspace.com’s Stomachion of Archimedes puzzle plan may be useful. In 2003, a retired businessman named Joe Marasco commissioned the puzzlemaking company Kadon Enterprises Inc., to manufacture Archimedes’ Puzzle for him and his friends. Joe then challenged programmers to identify, with proven accuracy, exactly how many solutions this puzzle has, offering a $100 reward for the first correct solution. Bill Cutler's program found there to be 536 possible distinct arrangements of the pieces into a square, where solutions that are equivalent by rotation and reflection are considered identical. You can read the whole story on the Gamepuzzles website. A New York Times front page article on December 14, 2003 reported the total of solutions to be 17,152; however this included all rotations and reflections, etc. Dividing 17,152 by 32 would, in fact, yield the 536 stated by Bill Cutler. How many solutions can your students find? How would they go about proving that there are this many? A new MEI teaching resource follows, in PowerPoint format. Click here to download all related files from our website. Tangrams: making shapes Make a tangram by drawing an 8 x 8 square and cutting out the 7 shapes as shown below. Tangrams: making shapes Use all 7 shapes each time; they can be rotated and flipped over if needed. Individual pieces must not overlap each other. Try to make the following: • A rectangle • A large isosceles triangle • A parallelogram • An isosceles trapezium • An irregular pentagon …with a line of symmetry • An irregular hexagon …with 2 lines of symmetry Tangrams: Square Make a tangram by drawing an 8 x 8 square and cutting out the 7 shapes as shown below. Tangrams: Square Use all 7 shapes each time; they can be rotated and flipped over if needed. Individual pieces must not overlap each other. How many different ways can the large square be made? Tangrams: area Make a tangram by drawing an 8 x 8 square and cutting out the 7 shapes as shown below. Find the area of each of the individual shapes. Tangrams: fractions Look at the tangram below. What fraction of the original square is each of the individual shapes? Tangrams: perimeter Make a tangram by drawing an 8 x 8 square and cutting out the 7 shapes as shown below. Find the perimeter of each of the individual shapes. Tangrams: perimeter 2 Make a tangram by drawing an 8 x 8 square and cutting out the 7 shapes as shown below. Tangrams: perimeter 2 Use all 7 shapes each time; they can be rotated and flipped over if needed. Individual pieces must not overlap each other. Make several different shapes and find their perimeters. What is the largest perimeter you can make? What is the smallest perimeter you can make? Tessellations A tessellation is a regular pattern made of tiles placed so that it can continue in all directions. Every bit of the pattern should be repeated. Anyone looking at the pattern should be able to see exactly how it will continue. Some tessellations are created using just one shape, others use two or more shapes Which of the patterns on the following slides are tessellations? Quadrilateral Tessellations Which quadrilaterals tessellate? Try using one of the following as a tile: • Square • Rectangle • Parallelogram • Rhombus • Trapezium • Kite • ‘Irregular’ quadrilateral Regular Tessellations A regular tessellation is one in which only one regular polygon is used. Tiles must all be the same size and have to be placed edge to edge. How many regular tessellations are there? Prove that there can be no others. Semi-regular tessellations A semi-regular tessellation is one in which more than one regular shape is used. How many different ones can you find? Given that the largest number of sides of a polygon in a semi-regular tessellation is 12, can you prove that no others are possible? Teacher notes The idea of this month’s classroom resource is to take a simple starting point and use it in several ways to address different aspects of the curriculum. It is not expected that this is a sequence of lessons as different activities will be most suitable for different groups of pupils. Additionally, many of these activities would make for good sources of display work, just in case anyone’s thinking about school ‘open days’… Tangrams: overview This ancient puzzle can be used in a variety of ways, traditionally: • To recreate given shapes • To create new shapes However, additional activities and questions are: • Area: Given that the side length of the original tangram is 8 units, find the area of each of the smaller shapes making up the tangram • How many different ways can all 7 shapes be used to make the square. Rotations and reflections not permitted. • What fraction of the original shape are each of the 7 pieces? • If the original tangram has side length 8 units, what are the side lengths (and/or perimeters) of each of the 7 pieces? • Make shapes using all 7 pieces and find their perimeters. What is the smallest perimeter that can be made using all 7 shapes? What’s the maximum perimeter that can be made using all 7 shapes Tangrams This ancient puzzle can be used in a variety of ways, traditionally: • To recreate given shapes • To create new shapes The usual rule is that pieces cannot overlap, sometimes an additional rule is given that all adjacent shapes must meet at an edge/ partial edge. This activity is accessible for almost all pupils Some answers, although there are probably several possibilities for each: Tangrams Area: Given that the side length of the original tangram is 8 units, find the area of each of the smaller shapes making up the tangram. Suitable for most KS3 pupils, can be solved by: • Counting squares • Reasoning - using the smaller square and deducing that each of the smaller triangles is half the area and then using combinations of these to physically recreate the larger shapes • Finding what fraction of the whole each piece represents • Using formulae Tangrams How many different ways can all 7 shapes be used to make the square. Suitable for most KS3 pupils Just one arrangement, but there are several rotations and reflections that can be created. Ask pupils to make the square in as many different ways as they can and use their responses to initiate discussions about ‘same and different’ and transformations as an introductory activity for reflections and rotations. Tangrams What fraction of the original shape are each of the 7 pieces? Tangrams: perimeters If the original tangram has side length 8 units, what are the side lengths (and/or perimeters) of each of the 7 pieces? • • • • • • • A B C D E F G Tangrams: perimeters 2 Make shapes using all 7 pieces and find their perimeters. What is the smallest perimeter that can be made using all 7 shapes? What’s the maximum perimeter that can be made using all 7 shapes? Mathematics required: surds Encourage pupils to leave answers in surd form for addition purposes, although they may have to convert to decimals to compare some. Pupils can experiment with shapes of their own or be given the shapes on slides 12 & 13 to begin with. They might also be given a limitation of only using certain shapes i.e triangles and quadrilaterals. Tangrams: perimeters 2 Long thin shapes will have a larger perimeter. A square might be expected to have the minimum perimeter, but shapes such as the hexagon shown actually have smaller ones. This could lead to a discussion about the relationship between area and perimeter. For a fixed area, the closer a shape is to being circular, the smaller its perimeter will be. Tangrams: perimeters 2 A selection of answers are shown Tessellations: overview Tessellations make for engaging activities, which are accessible to most pupils. In Key Stage 3 the activities might begin with creating tessellations However, they also provide opportunities for utilising dynamic geometry software and also for reasoning and proving. Activities: Is it or isn’t it a tessellation Quadrilateral tessellations Regular tessellations Semi-regular tessellations Tessellations: is it or isn’t it? • • • • • 1 – yes 2 – yes 3 – no: not a regular pattern 4 – yes 5 – no: this is a pattern, but it’s not repeated Tessellations: Which quadrilaterals tessellate? All quadrilaterals tessellate This can be explored by pupils cutting out a template and drawing round it to create a tessellation. Another way to demonstrate this is to use Dynamic Geometry Software, using the Geogebra file ‘Quadrilateral Tessellation’. (free Geogebra software required). The quadrilateral in the top left hand corner of the page is the driver. Move the vertices of this shape and all others will change with it, maintaining a tessellation. Hence it can be demonstrated that all quadrilaterals tessellate. Tessellations: Regular tessellations Moving into reasonably simple proof, it can be shown that there are only 3 possible regular tessellations. It would be helpful for pupils to be given time to think about how they could prove this and perhaps have a class discussion rather than telling them how to prove it. Tiles are fitted edge to edge and hence meet at points. Since the angle sum must be 360°, the interior angle of the regular polygon must be a factor of 360. There are (at least) two ways to approach this. • Find all the factors of 360 and work out which ones are interior angles of regular polygons or • For a tessellation there must be 3 shapes meeting at a point - 2 wouldn’t be a point. Therefore the largest angle it could be would be 120° (hexagon) and the smallest regular polygon is a triangle 60° . This means that only 4 shapes need to be checked to determine if their interior angles are factors of 360° Tessellations: Semi-regular tessellations There are 8 semi-regular tessellations, although there is a 9th if a mirror image is permitted. Proof by exhaustion can be used to prove that there are no others, but the entire proof would be daunting. Providing the information that the largest number of sides for any regular polygon in a semi-regular tessellation is 12 makes the problem more accessible. Finding a logical and systematic way to identify combinations of interior angles of regular polygons which have a sum of 360° allows another proof by exhaustion. 7 piece tangram MEI is a registered charity, number 1058911 MEI is a registered charity, number 1058911