Viviani's curve

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File:Viviani-fenster-1.svg
Viviani's curve: intersection of a sphere with a tangent cylinder.
File:Viviani-fenster-2.svg
The light blue part of the hemisphere can be squared.

In mathematics, Viviani's curve, also known as Viviani's window, is a figure-eight-shaped space curve named after the Italian mathematician Vincenzo Viviani. It is the intersection of a sphere with a cylinder that is tangent to the sphere and passes through two poles (a diameter) of the sphere (see diagram). Before Viviani, this curve was studied by Simon de La Loubère and Gilles de Roberval.[1][2]

The orthographic projection of Viviani's curve onto a plane perpendicular to the line through the crossing point and the sphere center is the lemniscate of Gerono, while the stereographic projection is a hyperbola or the lemniscate of Bernoulli, depending on which point on the same line is used to project.[3]

In 1692, Viviani solved the following task: Cut out of a hemisphere (radius r) two windows, such that the remaining surface (of the hemisphere) can be squared; that is, a square with the same area can be constructed using only ruler and compass. His solution has an area of 4r2 (see below).

Equations

File:Viviani kromme.jpg
With the cylinder upright.

In order to keep the proof for squaring simple, suppose that the sphere and cylinder have the equations

x2+y2+z2=r2

and

x2+y2rx=0,

respectively. The cylinder has radius r/2 and is tangent to the sphere at point (r,0,0).

Properties of the curve

Floor plan, elevation, and side plan

File:Viviani-fenster-xyz.svg
Floor plan, elevation and side plan

Elimination of x, y, and z respectively yields the orthogonal projections of the intersection curve onto the:

x-y-plane is the circle with equation (xr2)2+y2=(r2)2,
x-z-plane the parabola with equation x=1rz2+r, and
y-z-plane the algebraic curve with the equation z4+r2(y2z2)=0.

Parametric representation

File:Viviani-fenster-3.svg
For parametric representation and the determination of the area

Representing the sphere by

x=rcosθcosφy=rcosθsinφz=rsinθπ2θπ2, πφπ,

and setting φ=θ, yields the curve

x=rcosθcosθy=rcosθsinθz=rsinθπ2θπ2.

One easily checks that the spherical curve fulfills the equation of the cylinder. But the boundaries allow only the red part (see diagram) of Viviani's curve. The missing second half (green) has the property φ=θ.

With help of this parametric representation it is easy to prove that the area of the hemisphere containing Viviani's curve minus the area of the two windows is 4r2. The area of the upper-right part of Viviani's window (see diagram) can be calculated by an integration:

Sspherer2cosθdθdφ=r20π/20θcosθdφdθ=r2(π21).

Hence the total area of the spherical surface included by Viviani's curve is 2πr24r2, and the area of the hemisphere (2πr2) minus the area of Viviani's window is 4r2, the area of a square with the sphere's diameter as the length of an edge.

Rational Bézier representation

The quarter of Viviani's curve that lies in the all-positive octant of 3D space cannot be represented exactly by a regular Bézier curve of any degree. However, it can be represented exactly by a 3D rational Bézier segment of degree 4, and there is an infinite family of rational Bézier control points generating that segment. One possible solution is given by the following five control points:

p0=(0,0,1,1)

p0=(0011)p1=(0122)/(22)p2=(2334)/6p3=(2112)/(22)p4=(1001)

p0=[0011]p1=[01221212]p2=[13121223]p3=[1212212212]p4=[1001]

The corresponding rational parametrization is:

(2μ2(μ22(2+2)μ+42+6)(2(μ1)μ+2+2)22(μ1)μ((μ1)μ324)(2(μ1)μ+2+2)2(μ1)(2μ+2+2)2(μ1)μ+2+2)μ[0,1]

Relation to other curves

  • The 8-shaped elevation (see above) is a Lemniscate of Gerono.
  • Viviani's curve is a special Clelia curve. For a Clelia curve, the relation between the angles is φ=cθ.
File:Viviani-kugel-kegel.svg
Viviani's curve (red) as intersection of the sphere and a cone (pink)

Subtracting twice the cylinder equation from the sphere's equation and completing the square leads to the equation

(xr)2+y2=z2,

which describes a right circular cone with its apex at (r,0,0), the double point of Viviani's curve. Hence, Viviani's curve can be considered not only as the intersection curve of a sphere and a cylinder but also as the intersection of a sphere and a cone, and as the intersection of a cylinder and a cone.

See also

References

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External links

  • Berger, Marcel: Geometry. II. Translated from the French by M. Cole and S. Levy. Universitext. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1987.
  • Berger, Marcel: Geometry. I. Translated from the French by M. Cole and S. Levy. Universitext. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1987. xiv+428 pp. Template:ISBN
  • Template:Springer
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  1. Kuno Fladt: Analytische Geometrie spezieller Flächen und Raumkurven. Springer-Verlag, 2013, Template:ISBN, 9783322853653, p. 97.
  2. K. Strubecker: Vorlesungen der Darstellenden Geometrie. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1967, p. 250.
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