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Add to Studio This picture is a collage of the 5 Platonic solids and 11 of the 13 Archimedean solids. Learn more about them in the Science U Triangle Tiling exhibit.

Today at Science U

How do triangle tilings turn into polyhedra?

Find out in Triangle Tilings and Polyhedra in the Science U Geometry Center

Focus on Math

The Math Forum at Swarthmore is one of the premier math sites on the Web. With an old and extensive collection, the Math Forum offers materials for nearly everone, from students to teachers, parents and researchers. Some of the perennial favorites at the Math Forum are:

Ask Dr. Math
where students can post questions and search for answers
Teachers' Place
with lesson plans, activities and discussion forums
Steve's Dump
a vast collection of math software and other internet resources.

Five-Minute Seminar
Introduction to Isometries: Teapots and Triangles


What do teapots and triangles have in common? If you said "nothing" you must have something against the letter "t". However, the correct answer for the day is that computer animations of teapots and triangles both boil down to the same basic geometric transformations, called isometries.

One way of looking at geometry is to think about shapes and sizes. Triangle, circles, cones, and so on, come up again and again in science, industry and commerce. When most of us first encounter geometry, we learn formulas and theorems describing useful and interesting properties of these shapes. Indeed, it was probably the need to compute weights and volumes that led merchants and traders to think about geometry formulas nearly 3000 years ago, and elaborating the study of shapes and sizes dominated geometers for the next several millenia.

However, starting in the 19th century, another way of looking at geometry emerged. The idea was to focus on how to manipulate and transform geometric objects instead of focusing on the objects themselves. This proved to be very effective, and rapidly lead to discoveries about non-Euclidean geometries, the theory of relativity, and even computer graphics.

Next Time: a closer look at computer graphics in "Geometry goes to Hollywood".
Complete Seminar Series available in the Science U Library.



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