1 / 17

Activity 2-8: V, S and E

www.carom-maths.co.uk. Activity 2-8: V, S and E. Do you have access to Autograph ?. If you do, then clicking on the links in this Powerpoint should open Autograph files automatically for you. But if you don’t. Click below, and you will taken to a file where Autograph is embedded.

Download Presentation

Activity 2-8: V, S and E

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. www.carom-maths.co.uk Activity 2-8: V, S and E

  2. Do you have access to Autograph? If you do, then clicking on the links in this Powerpoint should open Autograph files automatically for you. But if you don’t.... Click below, and you will taken to a file where Autograph is embedded. Autograph Activity link http://autograph-maths.com/ activities/maxhikorski/carom-2-12-1.html

  3. E = total edge lengthS = total surface areaV = volume

  4. There are six ways to write E, S and V in order of size. Interesting question: can you find a cube for each order? If not, what about a cuboid?

  5. E = 12x, S = 6x2, V = x3 Let’s try a cube, of side x: We can plot y = 12x, y = 6x2, y = x3 together… Autograph File 1 http://www.s253053503.websitehome.co.uk/carom/carom-files/carom-2-12-3.agg Only four regions!

  6. log y = logx + log 12logy = 2logx + log 6log y = 3logx Or, taking logs with y = 12x, y= 6x2,y = x3 gives us and now we can plot log y v log x:

  7. It’s clear that only 4 out of 6 orders are possible.

  8. 0 < x < 2 V < S < E The four possible orders are: 2 < x < √12 V < E < S √12 < x < 6 E < V < S 6 < x E < S < V

  9. Can we find a cuboidwith sides x, y, z such that S < E and S < V?

  10. We need;xyz > 2xy + 2yz + 2zx and 4x + 4y + 4z > 2xy + 2yz + 2zx Now if a > b > 0 and c > d > 0,then ac > bd > 0

  11. So if xyz > 2xy + 2yz + 2zx > 0and4x + 4y + 4z > 2xy + 2yz + 2zx > 0 then (4x+4y+4z)xyz > (2xy+2yz+2zx)2 So 4x2yz+4xy2z+4xyz2 > 4x2yz+4xy2z+4xyz2+f(x, y, z) wheref(x, y, z) > 0. Contradiction!

  12. If x = 3, y = 4 and z = 5,then V = 60, S = 94, E = 48. Is there another cuboid where the values for V, S, and E are some other permutation of 60, 94 and 48?

  13. (2x-a)(2x-b)(2x-c) = 8x3 - 4(a+b+c)x2 + 2(ab+bc+ca)x - abc = 8x3 – Ex2 + Sx – V where E, S and V are for the cuboid with sides a, b and c. The equation 8x3 – Ex2 + Sx – V = 0 has roots a/2, b/2 and c/2.

  14. y = 8x3  48x2 + 94x – 60,y = 8x3  48x2 + 60x – 94,y = 8x3  94x2 + 48x – 60,y = 8x3  94x2 + 60x – 48,y = 8x3  60x2 + 94x – 48,y = 8x3  60x2 + 48x – 94. So our question becomes: which of the following six curves has three positive roots?

  15. Just the one. What happens if we vary V, S and E? Autograph File 2 http://www.s253053503.websitehome.co.uk/carom/carom-files/carom-2-12-4.agg

  16. a = 8, b = 30, c = 29. Yellow: roots are 0.4123..., 1.2127..., 2, sides are double. V = 8, S = 30, E = 29. Green: roots are 0.5, 0.8246..., 2.4254..., sides are double. V = 8, S = 29, E = 30.

  17. With thanks to:Rachel Bolton, for posing the interesting question at the start. Douglas Butler. Carom is written by Jonny Griffiths, hello@jonny-griffiths.net

More Related