T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
17.1 | | HARE::STAN | | Mon Jan 30 1984 12:18 | 15 |
| Well, you can't do it by dividing the circumference into 7 equal parts
and cutting to the center because that would mean you could construct
a regular heptagon. Galois proved that the only regular n-gons that
can be constructed with straight-edge and compasses are of the form
k
n = 2 X F
where F is a Fermat prime. (A Fermat prime is a prime of the form
m
2
2 + 1 ,
e.g. 3, 5, 17, 257, etc.)
|
17.2 | | HARE::STAN | | Mon Jan 30 1984 16:18 | 22 |
| I assume that when you want the pizza divided up into 7 equal parts that
you mean 7 parts that have the same area (not 7 congruent parts).
Anyhow, here's a solution:
Let us assume that the radius of the pizza is R. We will cut a circular
piece of radius r out of the center that has an area equal to 1/7 of the
area of the pizza. The remaining annulus (with area 6/7 of the pizza)
can then easily be divided into 6 equal pieces by inscribing a regular
hexagon in the circle and joining their vertices to the center of the
circle.
To find r, we note that pi r^2 = 1/7 pi R^2, so that R/r=sqrt(7).
But sqrt(7) is quadratic and can therefore be constructed with straight-
edge and compasses. So we are done.
(An easy way to construct sqrt(7) is to draw a circle with diameter 8.
Let P be a point on a diameter AB that divides the diameter into two pieces
with lengths 1 and 7. Erect a perpendicular at P until it hits the circle
again at Q. Then PQ=sqrt(7) because ABQ is a right triangle with altitude
PQ and an altitude is the mean proportion between the segments it forms
on the hypotenuse.)
|
17.3 | | ULTRA::HERBISON | | Mon Jan 30 1984 19:56 | 15 |
| Right.
The initial source of this problem was someone who wanted a clearer proof
that you could not 7-sect an angle with straight edge and compass (apparently
he had called a pizza place and asked for a pizza cut in 7 pieces and was
given a proof of why it was impossible over the phone!). I saw a loop
hole in the way the question was asked and came up with the same solution
you did.
A refignment (suggested by the person at Bell Labs who submitted the initial
problem) is to divide the pizza in to 7 rings rather than one circle and
six truncated wedges. If you do this than the solution can be generalized
to divide a pizza into any number of pieces. However, this only works if
you party consists of exactly one person who likes eating the crust.
B.J.
|
17.4 | | HARE::STAN | | Sat Feb 04 1984 12:17 | 14 |
| A correction on 17.1:
A regular n-gon is constructible with straight-edge and compasses
if and only if n is of the form
k
2 F F ... F
1 2 r
where each F (if any) denotes a Fermat prime.
i
My previous statement was incorrect. For example, a regular
15-gon is constructible since 15=3 X 5, the product of two Fermat primes.
|
17.5 | Gauss had a solution? | CACHE::MARSHALL | | Thu Jun 26 1986 09:36 | 5 |
| Hi,
Didn't Gauss develop a constuction that would divide the
circumference of a circle into 7 equal segments (or was it 17)?
steve M (beware the fractal dragon)
|