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In Euclidean geometry, a spirolateral is a polygon created by a sequence of fixed vertex internal angles and sequential edge lengths 1,2,3,…,''n'' which repeat until the figure closes. The number of repeats needed is called its cycles. Gardner, M. ''Worm Paths'' Ch. 17 ''Knotted Doughnuts and Other Mathematical Entertainments'' New York: W. H. Freeman, pp. 205-221, 1986

/ref> A ''simple spirolateral'' has only positive angles. A simple spiral approximates of a portion of an
archimedean spiral The Archimedean spiral (also known as the arithmetic spiral) is a spiral named after the 3rd-century BC Greek mathematician Archimedes. It is the locus corresponding to the locations over time of a point moving away from a fixed point with a con ...
. A ''general spirolateral'' allows positive and negative angles. A ''spirolateral'' which completes in one
turn Turn may refer to: Arts and entertainment Dance and sports * Turn (dance and gymnastics), rotation of the body * Turn (swimming), reversing direction at the end of a pool * Turn (professional wrestling), a transition between face and heel * Turn, ...
is a simple polygon, while requiring more than 1 turn is a
star polygon In geometry, a star polygon is a type of non-convex polygon. Regular star polygons have been studied in depth; while star polygons in general appear not to have been formally defined, certain notable ones can arise through truncation operations ...
and must be self-crossing. A simple spirolateral can be an equangular simple polygon <''p''> with ''p'' vertices, or an equiangular star polygon <''p''/''q''> with ''p'' vertices and ''q'' turns. Spirolaterals were invented and named by Frank C. Odds as a teenager in 1962, as ''square spirolaterals'' with 90° angles, drawn on
graph paper Graph paper, coordinate paper, grid paper, or squared paper is writing paper that is printed with fine lines making up a regular grid. The lines are often used as guides for plotting graphs of functions or experimental data and drawing curves. I ...
. In 1970, Odds discovered ''triangular and hexagonal spirolateral'', with 60° and 120° angles, can be drawn on
isometric The term ''isometric'' comes from the Greek for "having equal measurement". isometric may mean: * Cubic crystal system, also called isometric crystal system * Isometre, a rhythmic technique in music. * "Isometric (Intro)", a song by Madeon from ...
(triangular) graph paper. Odds wrote to Martin Gardner who encouraged him to publish the results in '' Mathematics Teacher'' in 1973.Focus on...Spirolaterals
Secondary Magazine Issue 78
The process can be represented in turtle graphics, alternating turn angle and move forward instructions, but limiting the turn to a fixed rational angle. The smallest golygon is a spirolateral, 790°4, made with 7 right angles, and length 4 follow concave turns. Golygons are different in that they must close with a single sequence 1,2,3,..''n'', while a spirolateral will repeat that sequence until it closes.


Classifications

A simple spirolateral has turns all the same direction.Abelson, Harold, diSessa, Andera, 1980, ''Turtle Geometry'', MIT Press, pp.37-39, 120-122 It is denoted by ''n''θ, where ''n'' is the number of sequential integer edge lengths and θ is the internal angle, as any rational divisor of 360°. Sequential edge lengths can be expressed explicitly as (1,2,...,''n'')θ. Note: The angle θ can be confusing because it represents the internal angle, while the supplementary
turn angle In geometry, an angle of a polygon is formed by two sides of the polygon that share an endpoint. For a simple (non-self-intersecting) polygon, regardless of whether it is convex or non-convex, this angle is called an interior angle (or ) if ...
can make more sense. These two angles are the same for 90°. This defines an equiangular polygon of the form <''kp''/''kq''>, where angle θ = 180(1−2''q''/''p''), with ''k'' = ''n''/''d'', and ''d'' = gcd(''n'',''p''). If ''d'' = ''n'', the pattern never closes. Otherwise it has ''kp'' vertices and ''kq'' density. The cyclic symmetry of a simple spirolateral is ''p''/''d''-fold. A regular polygon, is a special case of a spirolateral, 1180(1−2/''p'')°. A regular star polygon, , is a special case of a spirolateral, 1180(1−2''q''/''p'')°. An isogonal polygon, is a special case spirolateral, 2180(1−2/''p'')° or 2180(1−2''q''/''p'')°. A general spirolateral can turn left or right. It is denoted by ''n''θ''a''1,...,''a''''k'', where ''a''''i'' are indices with negative or concave angles. For example, 260°2 is a
crossed rectangle In Euclidean plane geometry, a rectangle is a quadrilateral with four right angles. It can also be defined as: an equiangular quadrilateral, since equiangular means that all of its angles are equal (360°/4 = 90°); or a parallelogram containin ...
with ±60° internal angles, bending left or right. An unexpected closed spiralateral returns to the first vertex on a single cycle. Only general spirolaterals may not close. A golygon is a regular unexpected closed spiralateral that closes from the expected direction. An irregular unexpected closed spiralateral is one that returns to the first point but from the wrong direction. For example 790°4. It takes 4 cycles to return to the start in the correct direction. A modern spirolateral, also called
loop-de-loops
by Educator Anna Weltman, is denoted by (''i''1,...,''i''''n'')θ, allowing any sequence of integers as the edge lengths, ''i''1 to ''i''''n''. For example, (2,3,4)90° has edge lengths 2,3,4 repeating. Opposite direction turns can be given a negative integer edge length. For example, a crossed rectangle can be given as (1,2,−1,−2)θ. An open spirolateral never closes. A simple spirolateral, ''n''θ, never closes if ''n''θ is a multiple of 360°, gcd(''p'',''n'') = ''p''. A ''general spirolateral'' can also be open if half of the angles are positive, half negative. :


Closure

The number of cycles it takes to close a ''spirolateral'', ''n''θ, with ''k'' opposite turns, ''p''/''q''=360/(180-''θ'') can be computed. Reduce fraction (''p''-2''q'')(''n''-2''k'')/2''p'' = ''a''/''b''. The figure repeats after ''b'' cycles, and complete ''a'' total turns. If ''b''=1, the figure never closes. Explicitly, the number of cycles is 2''p''/''d'', where d= gcd((''p''-2''q'')(''n''-2''k''),2''p''). If ''d''=2''p'', it closes on 1 cycle or never. The number of cycles can be seen as the rotational symmetry order of the spirolateral. ;''n''90° Spirolateral 1 90-fill.svg, 190°, 4 cycle, 1 turn Spirolateral 2 90-fill.svg, 290°, 2 cycle, 1 turn Spirolateral 3 90-fill.svg, 390°, 4 cycle, 3 turn Spirolateral 4 90b.svg, 490°, never closes Spirolateral 5 90-fill.svg, 590°, 4 cycle, 5 turn Spirolateral 6 90-fill.svg, 690°, 2 cycle, 3 turn Spirolateral 7 90.svg, 790°, 4 cycle, 6 turns Spirolateral 8 90.svg, 890°, never closes Spirolateral 9 90-fill.svg, 990°, 4 cycle, 9 turn Spirolateral 10 90-fill.svg, 1090°, 2 cycle, 5 turn ;''n''60°: Spirolateral 1 60-fill.svg, 160°, 3 cycle, 1 turn Spirolateral 2 60-fill.svg, 260°, 3 cycle, 2 turn Spirolateral 3 60.svg, 360°, never closes Spirolateral 4 60-fill.svg, 460°, 3 cycle, 4 turn Spirolateral 5 60-fill.svg, 560°, 3 cycle, 5 turn Spirolateral 6 60.svg, 660°, never closes Spirolateral 7 60-fill.svg, 760°, 3 cycle, 7 turn Spirolateral 8 60-fill.svg, 860°, 3 cycle, 8 turn Spirolateral 9 60.svg, 960°, never closes Spirolateral 10 60-fill.svg, 1060°, 3 cycle, 10 turn


Small simple spirolaterals

Spirolaterals can be constructed from any rational divisor of 360°. The first table's columns sample angles from small regular polygons and second table from star polygons, with examples up to ''n'' = 6. An equiangular polygon <''p''/''q''> has ''p'' vertices and ''q'' density. <''np''/''nq''> can be reduced by ''d'' = gcd(''n'',''p''). ; Small whole divisor angles ; Small rational divisor angles


See also

* Turtle graphics represent a computer language that defines an open or close path as move lengths and turn angles.


References

{{reflist * Alice Kaseberg Schwandt ''Spirolaterals: An advanced Investignation from an Elementary Standpoint'', Mathematical Teacher, Vol 72, 1979, 166-16

* Margaret Kenney and Stanley Bezuszka, ''Square Spirolaterals'' Mathematics Teaching, Vol 95, 1981, pp.22-2

* Gascoigne, Serafi
Turtle Fun LOGO for the Spectrum 48K pp 42-46 , Spirolaterals
1985 * Wells, D. ''The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry'' London: Penguin, pp. 239-241, 1991. * Krawczyk, Robert, "Hilbert's Building Blocks", Mathematics & Design, The University of the Basque Country, pp. 281-288, 1998. * Krawczyk, Robert, ''Spirolaterals, Complexity from Simplicity'', International Society of Arts, Mathematics and Architecture 99,The University of the Basque Country, pp. 293-299, 1999

* Krawczyk, Robert J. ''The Art of Spirolateral reversals'


External links


Spirolaterals
Javascript App Types of polygons