activity 1-1: geodesics . a spider spots a fly on the other side of the room
TRANSCRIPT
The room is a large cuboid, 30m by 12m by 12m.
Task: what is the spider’s shortest route to reach the fly?
The fly is one metre from the ceiling in the middle of the opposite end wall.
The spider is one metre from the floor in the middle
of one end wall.
It helps here to create a net of the room and lay it flat.
So clearly a 42m journey is a possible
solution.
But can we do better?
A geodesic is simply the shortest distance between two points.
On the plane, the geodesic between two pointsis the straight line that you can draw with a
ruler.
What the geodesic is varies according to the surface that you are working on,
and the idea of distance that you are working with.
On the sphere, the geodesic between two
pointsis an arc of a great circle
(a great circle is the largest circle
you can draw on a sphere,
with its centre at the sphere’s centre). Above, a geodesic triangle ABC
on a sphere, made up of sides that are arcs of great circles.
There is a principle in physics;That light always takes the quickest path
from A to B.
If light travels from A to B via reflectionin the blue surface, what path does it take?
The spider slowly follows.
Let’s get back to our spider and fly.
Just before the spider reaches the fly, it flies off and settles on the side of a glass.
The glass is cylindrical, 4cm high and
6cm in circumference. The fly is 1 cm from the top of the glass,
on the inside.
The spider moves to a point
1 cm from the base of the glass on the outside, directly opposite to the fly.
With thanks to Pixabay, and Wikipedia.
Carom is written by Jonny Griffiths, [email protected]