After muttering through Godel I have decided to try something fun. Maybe this should go into Puzzles, but this is the math area...
It has been said (somewhere here ) that a square cannot be a circle (sorry, a cube cannot be a sphere).
Hence the challenge: prove (using the geometry of your choice) that a square can be a circle.
I'll start:
Consider a non-Euclidian space, to be precise, the surface of a sphere of radius R.
A Circle is a set of points all of which are the same distance from a given center C.
A Square is a quadrilateral, each side is the same size and each angle is equal.
Take a point C, and look at the circle of radius pi R / 2 and center C. This circle is a great arc of the space, and so is also a straight line by local definitions.
Consider the squares (in the non Euclidian space) that have C as a center (intersection of the diagonals). All summits of the square are the same distance from C, and so are in a circle (non-Euclidian) of center C. Of course, the sides are, as a general rule, not in the circle, since they are parts of great arcs.
Take, in particular, the square whose diagonal is pi R / 2 long. The only great arc connecting two adjacent sides is on the circle - hence this specific square is a circle.
Thus, in this non-Euclidian space, every circle of radius pi R / 2 is also a square (and a triangle, for that matter).
Neat!
Next...
It has been said (somewhere here ) that a square cannot be a circle (sorry, a cube cannot be a sphere).
Hence the challenge: prove (using the geometry of your choice) that a square can be a circle.
I'll start:
Consider a non-Euclidian space, to be precise, the surface of a sphere of radius R.
A Circle is a set of points all of which are the same distance from a given center C.
A Square is a quadrilateral, each side is the same size and each angle is equal.
Take a point C, and look at the circle of radius pi R / 2 and center C. This circle is a great arc of the space, and so is also a straight line by local definitions.
Consider the squares (in the non Euclidian space) that have C as a center (intersection of the diagonals). All summits of the square are the same distance from C, and so are in a circle (non-Euclidian) of center C. Of course, the sides are, as a general rule, not in the circle, since they are parts of great arcs.
Take, in particular, the square whose diagonal is pi R / 2 long. The only great arc connecting two adjacent sides is on the circle - hence this specific square is a circle.
Thus, in this non-Euclidian space, every circle of radius pi R / 2 is also a square (and a triangle, for that matter).
Neat!
Next...