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Posts Tagged ‘Felix Klein

“Geometry is not true, it is advantageous”*…

 

4dcube

The tesseract is a four dimensional cube. It has 16 edge points v=(a,b,c,d), with a,b,c,d either equal to +1 or -1. Two points are connected, if their distance is 2. Given a projection P(x,y,z,w)=(x,y,z) from four dimensional space to three dimensional space, we can visualize the cube as an object in familar space. The effect of a linear transformation like a rotation

|   1  0    0    0      | 
R(t) =   |   0  1    0    0      |
         |   0  0  cos(t) sin(t) |
         |   0  0 -sin(t) cos(t) |

in 4d space can be visualized in 3D by viewing the points v(t) = P R(t) v in R3.

* Henri Poincare

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As we follow the bouncing ball, we might spare a thought for Felix Klein; he died on this date in 1925.  A mathematician of broad gauge, he is best remembered for his work in non-Euclidean geometry, perhaps especially for his work on synthesis of geometry as the study of the properties of a space that are invariant under a given group of transformations, known as the Erlanger Program, which profoundly influenced mathematics.  He created the Klein bottle, a one-sided closed surface–a non-orientable surface with no inside and no outside– that cannot be constructed in Euclidean space.

kleinBottle_anim

A Klein bottle

source

225px-Felix_Klein source

 

Written by (Roughly) Daily

June 22, 2014 at 1:01 am