Title: Golden Rectangles and Spiral Growth
1Golden Rectangles and Spiral Growth
2Golden Rectangles
- A golden rectangle is a rectangle where the ratio
of the sides is the golden ratio. - We found that if we add a square onto the longer
side of a golden rectangle we get another golden
rectangle. - This idea came from the realization that if we
add a rectangle to the longer side of a Fibonacci
rectangle we get another Fibonacci rectangle.
3The Golden Ratio
- This ratio between the sides of a golden
rectangle is called the golden ratio. - The ancient Greeks viewed this proportion as the
ideal and employed it in much of their
architedture and artwork. - The golden ratio is often designated by the Greek
letter Phi, the first letter in the name of the
Greek sculptor and architect Pheidias. - It was also popular among Renaissance artists,
including Leonardo da Vinci. - This value came up in Binets Formula that allows
us to find any Fibonacci number, and seems to
some strange connection to the Fibonacci
sequence.
4The Golden Ratio
- We noticed that the ratios of consecutive
Fibonacci numbers seemed to be approaching some
value. - We found the value of
- as a solution to the equation
- We can use this to find higher powers of
5For example,
Continuing like this we get
and in general,
6Back to Golden rectangles and similar shapes
- Recall that two shapes are similar if the ratio
of corresponding lengths are equal. - If we add a square to the longer side of a golden
rectangle we get a golden rectangle, i.e., a
similar shape. - When we can do this (start with one shape, add
something to it and get a shape similar to the
original), the added shape is called a gnomon to
the original shape.
7Examples of gnomons
b
- A square is a gnomon to a golden rectangle
a
b
b
8A ring is a gnomon to a circle.
The new shape is still a circle.
Can a ring have a gnomon?
The result is a ring, but is it really similar to
the original ring?
9So not all shapes have gnomons and many shapes
can have several types of gnomons.
10Gnomic Growth
- Gnomonic growth is when growth occurs by the
addition of a gnomon. - That is, as the object grows it maintains the
same relative shape, but increases in size.
11Gnomonic Growth
Start with a circle . . .
. . . and add a ring . . .
. . . and another ring . . .
. . . and another ring . . .
. . . and so on . . .
The result is always a circle, similar to the
original shape, only larger.
This is gnomonic growth.
12Spiral and Gnomonic Growth
13Suggested Problems
Chapter 9 5, 7, 8, 12, 15, 16, (see if you
can prove these using the recursive
definition) 19, 25, 27, 29, 31, 52 (for b,
rewrite FN in terms of FN-1 and FN1)
Next Linear, exponential, and logistic growth
models. (10.1-4)