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Aperiodic Tilings. Alexandre Karassev. Tilings. A tiling (or tessellation) is a cover of the plane (or space) by nonoverlaping regions. Tilings in nature. Escher’s tilings. http ://www.mcescher.com/. 3D T ilings and Crystals. 3D T ilings and Crystals. Cu. B N. Na Cl.
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Aperiodic Tilings Alexandre Karassev
Tilings • A tiling (or tessellation) is a cover of the plane (or space) by nonoverlaping regions
Escher’s tilings http://www.mcescher.com/
3D Tilings and Crystals Cu B N Na Cl
Tiles • A tile is a polygonal region of the plane (not necessarily convex) • Two tiles are called • identical (congruent) if one can be transformed to the other by shift and rotation • of the same type (or similar), if one is a rescaling of the other Tiles of the same type Identical tiles
Matching rules • Matching rules specify a way of joining individual tiles (e.g. edge to edge matching) • Matching rules can be enforced in a number of ways, including: • vertex labeling or coloring • edge labeling or coloring • edge modifications
Examples Edge modification Vertex coloring Homework: Draw the resulting tiling
Homework • Any triangle can tile the plane • Any quadrilateral (even non-convex)can tile the plane • Which pentagons can tile the plane?Find at least one • Find a convex tile that can tile the plane in exactlyone way • Can a regular tetrahedron tile the space?What about other regular polyhedra? • What about a non-regular tetrahedron?
Periodic and non-periodic tilings • A tiling is called periodic if it can be shifted to perfectly align with itself in at least two non-parallel directions • A tiling is called non-periodic if it cannot be shifted to perfectly align with itself • Do non-periodic tilings exist?
Trivial example Is there a non-periodic tiling of the plane consisiting of identical tiles?
Less Trivial example Yes: cut squares “randomly” Homework: Make the cutting process more algorithmic to create a non-periodic tiling
Homework • Find other examples of non-periodic tilings by copies of a single triangle • Can non-periodic tilings be created using copies of a single square? What about rectangles?
Source of more interesting examples:substitution tilings • A partial tiling of the plane consisting of finitely many tiles is called a patch • Let S be a finite set of distinct tiles and S’ is a set of bigger (inflated) tiles, similar to those from S under the same rescaling • Suppose that each tile in S’ can be cut into a finite number of tiles that belong to S • Let P be a patch consisting of tiles from S • Rescale (inflate) P and then cut each tile in P to produce bigger patch that still uses tiles from S
Example: armchair tiling Source: Wikipedia
Why is the armchair tilingnon-periodic? TheoremIf, in a substitution tiling, every next generation of tiles can be composed back into larger tiles in a unique way, the resulting tiling of the plane is non-periodic
Another example Source: Wikipedia
Conway’s pinwheel tiling(explicitly described by Charles Radin in 1994) John Conway
Why is the pinwheel tilingnon-periodic? Theorem In the pinwheel tiling, every triangle appears rotated in infinitely many ways (reason: the angle arctan (1/2) is not a rational multiple of pi)
Nevertheless… • The armchair and two Conway’s triangles can also tile plane periodically • Are there finite sets of tiles that can tile plane only non-periodically? • Such finite sets of tiles are called aperiodic and the resulting tilings are called aperiodic tilings
Wang’s Conjecture and Discovery of Aperiodic Tilings • Conjecture (Wang, 1961): if a set of tiles can tile the plane, then they can always be arranged to do so periodically • Berger (1966): conjecture is false, and thus aperiodic tiles exist (first set contained 20,426 tiles)
Smaller sets of aperiodic tiles • Raphael Robinson, 1971: 6 tiles • Roger Penrose, 1973 : discovery of sets containing 2 tiles • More small sets where also found by Robert Ammann • UnsolvedProblem: does there exist one aperiodic tile?
Penrose Tiles and Tilings • Pentagons, “diamond”,“boat”, “star” • Two rhombuses • “Kite” and “dart” Sir Roger Penrose
Kite, dart, and golden triangle Golden ratio: 36o ϕ 72o 1
Kite, dart, and golden triangle Golden ratio: 36o ϕ 72o 1
Kite, dart, and golden triangle Golden ratio: 36o ϕ 72o 1
Kite, dart, and golden triangle Golden ratio: 36o ϕ 72o 1
Kite and dart: matching rules Prohibited configuration:
Possible vertex configurations Source: Wikipedia
Kite and dart are aperiodic TheoremAny tiling of the plane by kites and darts that follows matching rules is aperiodic
Why can we tile the whole plane? • Extension theoremLet S be a finite set of tiles and let Dn denote the disc of radius n centered at the origin. Suppose that for any n there exists a patch Snconisting of tiles from S such that Sn covers Dn. Then tiles from S can tile the whole plane. • Note: patches Sn do not have to be extensions of each other, and moreover, do not have to be related in any other way!
Applying it to kite and dart • We need to show that kites and darts can tile arbitrary large regions of the plane • This can be done through the process of substitution and deflation/inflation Source: Wikipedia
Application of aperiodic tilings: quasicrystals In 1984 Dan Shechtman announced the discovery of new type of crystal-like structure
Quasicrystals • In 1984 Dan Shechtman announced the discovery of a material which produced a sharp diffraction pattern with a fivefold symmetry • This type of rotational symmetry is prohibited by crystallographic restrictions for usual (periodic) crystals, and thus the new material must be “aperiodic crystal” • Previously (in 1975) Robert Ammann had extended the Penrose construction to a three-dimensional icosahedral equivalent • Since Schehtman’s discovery, hundreds of different types of quasicrystals were found, including naturally occurring ones • Schehtman received Nobel prize in Chemistry in 2011
Thank you! • Questions faculty.nipissingu.ca/alexandk alexandk@nipissingu.ca