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The coins are not really Reuleaux polygons (they don't come to oblique angles but remain smooth curves).
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== Reuleaux polygons ==
== Reuleaux polygons ==
[[File:Reuleaux polygons.svg|thumb|Reuleaux polygons]]
[[File:Reuleaux polygons.svg|thumb|Reuleaux polygons]]
The Reuleaux triangle can be generalized to [[regular polygon]]s with an odd number of sides, yielding a '''Reuleaux polygon'''. The most commonly used of these is the Reuleaux heptagon, which is the shape of several coins:
The Reuleaux triangle can be generalized to [[regular polygon]]s with an odd number of sides, yielding a '''Reuleaux polygon'''. The most commonly used of these is the Reuleaux heptagon, which is approximately the shape of several coins:
* [[Botswana pula]] coins in the denominations of 2 pula, 1 pula, 25 thebe and 5 thebe.
* [[Botswana pula]] coins in the denominations of 2 pula, 1 pula, 25 thebe and 5 thebe.
* [[Coins of the Cypriot pound#Decimal - cents|Cypriot]] 50-cent coin, from 1991 until Cyprus joined the [[Euro]] in 2008.
* [[Coins of the Cypriot pound#Decimal - cents|Cypriot]] 50-cent coin, from 1991 until Cyprus joined the [[Euro]] in 2008.

Revision as of 22:51, 22 March 2014

The Reuleaux triangle is a constant width curve based on an equilateral triangle. All points on a side are equidistant from the opposite vertex.

A Reuleaux triangle is the simplest and best known Reuleaux polygon. It is a curve of constant width, meaning that the separation of two parallel lines tangent to the curve is independent of their orientation. Because all diameters are the same, the Reuleaux triangle is one answer to the question "Other than a circle, what shape can a manhole cover be made so that it cannot fall down through the hole?" The term derives from Franz Reuleaux, a 19th-century German engineer who did pioneering work on ways that machines translate one type of motion into another, although the concept was known before his time.

Construction

To construct a Reuleaux triangle

With a compass, sweep an arc sufficient to enclose the desired figure. With radius unchanged, sweep a sufficient arc centred at a point on the first arc to intersect that arc. With the same radius and the centre at that intersection sweep a third arc to intersect the other arcs. The result is a curve of constant width.

Equivalently, given an equilateral triangle T of side length s, take the boundary of the intersection of the disks with radius s centered at the vertices of T.

By the Blaschke–Lebesgue theorem, the Reuleaux triangle has the least area of any curve of given constant width. This area is , where s is the constant width. The existence of Reuleaux polygons shows that diameter measurements alone cannot verify that an object has a circular cross-section.

The area of Reuleaux triangle is smaller than that of the disk of the same width (i.e. diameter); the area of such a disk is .

Reuleaux polygons

Reuleaux polygons

The Reuleaux triangle can be generalized to regular polygons with an odd number of sides, yielding a Reuleaux polygon. The most commonly used of these is the Reuleaux heptagon, which is approximately the shape of several coins:

The constant width of such coins allows their use in coin-operated machines.

Other uses

The Reuleaux triangle rotating inside a square
  • The rotor of the Wankel engine is easily mistaken for a Reuleaux triangle but its curved sides are somewhat flatter than those of a Reuleaux triangle and so it does not have constant width.[1]
  • The Watts Brothers Tool Works square drill bit has the shape of a Reuleaux triangle and can, if mounted in a special chuck which allows for the bit not having a fixed centre of rotation, drill a hole that is nearly square;[2] the corners of the square are slightly rounded, as can be seen by tracing any vertex in this figure, and the drill bit covers 0.9877... of the area of the square.[3] The Harry Watt square is often used in mortising[4][5] Other Reuleaux polygons are used to drill pentagonal, hexagonal, and octagonal holes.
  • A Reuleaux triangle (along with all other curves of constant width) can roll but makes a poor wheel because it does not roll about a fixed center of rotation. An object on top of rollers with cross-sections that were Reuleaux triangles would roll smoothly and flatly, but an axle attached to Reuleaux triangle wheels would bounce up and down three times per revolution. This concept was used in a science fiction short story by Poul Anderson titled "The Three-Cornered Wheel."[6]
  • Several pencils are manufactured in this shape, rather than the more traditional round or hexagonal barrels.[7] They are usually promoted as being more comfortable or encouraging proper grip, as well as being less likely to roll off tables (since the center of gravity moves up and down more than a rolling hexagon).
  • The shape is used for signage for the National Trails System administered by the United States National Park Service,[8] as well as the logo of Colorado School of Mines and the Connecticut Collegiate Mathematics Competition.
  • The corporate logo of Petrofina (Fina), a Belgian oil company with major operations in Europe, North America and Africa, utilized a Reuleaux triangle with the Fina name from 1950 until Petrofina's merger with Total S.A. in 2000.[9] A rotated version of Fina's Reuleaux triangle is utilized by Alon USA, which acquired the American Petrofina operations spun off by Total in 2006.[10]
  • Valve covers used in the Mission Bay Project of San Francisco to differentiate reclaimed water from potable water are in the shape of a Reuleaux triangle.[11]
An equidiagonal kite that maximizes the ratio of perimeter to diameter, inscribed in a Reuleaux triangle
  • Among all quadrilaterals, the shape that has the greatest ratio of its perimeter to its diameter is an equidiagonal kite that can be inscribed into a Reuleaux triangle.[12]
  • Many guitar picks employ the Reuleaux triangle, as its unique shape combines a sharp point to provide strong articulation, with a wide tip to produce a warm timbre. Many players find the shape ergonomic, since it naturally tends to point in the proper direction. Its three equal tips also prevent wear and extend lifespan, as compared to the single tip of a pick shaped like an isosceles triangle. [13]
  • Many windows in buildings designed by Berlage in Amsterdam's Plan Zuid extension are the shape of the Reuleaux triangle.[citation needed]
  • An approximation to the Reuleaux triangle often comes up when a two-fluted drill is used to drill into thin sheet metal: the metal may chatter laterally, or the drill may flex, such that the hole drilled approximates the Reuleaux triangle, which minimizes the material removed and hence the energy necessary to drill the hole. This is not always a desired effect. It can be mitigated by clamping the drilled material or by use of another type of drill such as one with 3 or 4 flutes, or some other geometry.[citation needed]

Three-dimensional version

The intersection of four spheres of radius s centered at the vertices of a regular tetrahedron with side length s is called the Reuleaux tetrahedron, but is not a surface of constant width.[14] It can, however, be made into a surface of constant width, called Meissner's tetrahedron, by replacing its edge arcs by curved surface patches. Alternatively, the surface of revolution of a Reuleaux triangle through one of its symmetry axes forms a surface of constant width, with minimum volume among all known surfaces of revolution of given constant width (Campi, Colesanti & Gronchi (1996)).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ein Wankel-Rotor ist kein Reuleux-Dreieck! German Translation A Wankel-Rotor is not a Reuleux-Triangle!
  2. ^ Watts Brothers Tool Works (1950–1951). "27 p. : ill. ; 23 x 15 cm. + price list & brochure.". How to drill square hexagon octagon pentagon holes. New York: Wilmerding, Pa. : The Company,.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  3. ^ Pickover, Clifford A., The Math Book, Sterling, 2009: p. 266.
  4. ^ Drilling Square Holes
  5. ^ Reuleaux Triangle – from Wolfram MathWorld
  6. ^ "Three-Cornered Wheel"
  7. ^ http://www.pencilrevolution.com/2006/04/review-of-staedtler-noris-ergosoft-hb/
  8. ^ "National Trails System – Visit The Trails". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-01-18.
  9. ^ "Fina Logo History: from Petrofina to Fina". Total: Group Presentation. Total S.A. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  10. ^ "Retail/Branded Marketing". Alon USA. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  11. ^ A picture of Reuleaux triangle water valve cover in MMA's Found Math gallery
  12. ^ Ball, D.G. (1973). "A generalisation of π". Mathematical Gazette. 57 (402): 298–303. doi:10.2307/3616052. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help); Griffiths, David; Culpin, David (1975). "Pi-optimal polygons". Mathematical Gazette. 59 (409): 165–175. doi:10.2307/3617699Template:Inconsistent citations {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link).
  13. ^ Hoover, Will (November 1995). Picks!: The Colorful Saga of Vintage Celluloid Guitar Plectrums. (pages 32-33) Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-0-87930-377-8.
  14. ^ Weber, Christof (2009). "What does this solid have to do with a ball?" (PDF). There are also films of both types of Meissner body rotating.

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