Paradox Of Loyd And Schlömilch
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The chessboard paradoxGreg N. Frederickson: ''Dissections: Plane and Fancy''. Cambridge University Press, 2003, , chapter 23, pp. 268–277 in particular pp. 271–274

Colin Foster: "Slippery Slopes". In: ''Mathematics in School'', vol. 34, no. 3 (May, 2005), pp. 33–34
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or paradox of Loyd and SchlömilchFranz Lemmermeyer: ''Mathematik à la Carte: Elementargeometrie an Quadratwurzeln mit einigen geschichtlichen Bemerkungen''. Springer 2014, , pp
95–96
(German)
is a falsidical paradox based on an optical illusion. A
chessboard A chessboard is a game board used to play chess. It consists of 64 squares, 8 rows by 8 columns, on which the chess pieces are placed. It is square in shape and uses two colours of squares, one light and one dark, in a chequered pattern. During p ...
or a square with a side length of 8 units is cut into four pieces. Those four pieces are used to form a rectangle with side lengths of 13 and 5 units. Hence the combined area of all four pieces is 64 area units in the square but 65 area units in the rectangle, this seeming contradiction is due an optical illusion as the four pieces don't fit exactly in the rectangle, but leave a small barely visible gap around the rectangle's diagonal. The paradox is sometimes attributed to the American puzzle inventor
Sam Loyd Samuel Loyd (January 30, 1841 – April 10, 1911) was an American chess player, chess composer, puzzle author, and recreational mathematics, recreational mathematician. Loyd was born in Philadelphia but raised in New York City. As a chess comp ...
(1841–1911) and the German mathematician Oskar Schlömilch (1832–1901).


Analysis

Upon close inspection one can see that the four pieces don't fit quite together but leave a small barely visible gap around the diagonal of the rectangle. This gap DEBF has the shape of a parallelogram, which can be checked by showing that the opposing angles are of equal size. : \begin \angle FDE &=90^\circ-\angle FDG -\angle EDI\\ pt &=90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-\arctan\left( \frac\right)\\ pt &=90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-\arctan\left( \frac\right)\\ pt &=90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-\arctan\left( \frac\right)\\ pt &=90^\circ-\angle FBJ -\angle EBH \\ pt &=\angle FBE \approx 1.24536^\circ \end \begin \angle DEB &=360^\circ-\angle DEI -\angle IEH -\angle EBH \\ pt &=360^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right) \\ pt &=360^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right) \\ pt &=360^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)-90^\circ-\arctan\left( \frac\right)\\ pt &=360^\circ-\angle BFJ -\angle JFG -\angle GFD \\ pt &=\angle DFB \approx 178.75464^\circ \end An exact fit of the four pieces along the rectangle's requires the parallelogram to collapse into a line segments, which means its need to have the following sizes: :\angle FBE = \angle FDE = 0^\circ :\angle DFB = \angle DEB = 180^\circ Since the actual angles deviate only slightly from those values, it creates the optical illusion of the parallelogram being just a line segment and the pieces fitting exactly. Alternatively one can verify the parallelism by placing the reactangle in a coordinate system and compare slopes or vector representation of the sides. The side length and diagonals of the parallelogram are: :, DE, =, FB, =\sqrt=\sqrt :, DF, =, EB, =\sqrt=\sqrt :, EF, =\sqrt=\sqrt :, DB, =\sqrt=\sqrt Using
Heron's formula In geometry, Heron's formula (or Hero's formula) gives the area of a triangle in terms of the three side lengths Letting be the semiperimeter of the triangle, s = \tfrac12(a + b + c), the area is A = \sqrt. It is named after first-century ...
one can compute the area of half of the parallelogram (\triangle DFG). The halved circumference is :s=\frac=\frac which yields the area of the whole parallelogram: : \begin F&=2\cdot\sqrt\\ pt &=2\cdot \frac \cdot \sqrt\\ pt&=2\cdot \frac \cdot 2 \\ pt&=1 \end So the area of the gap accounts exactly for the additional area of the rectangle.


Generalization

The line segments occurring in the drawing of the last chapters are of length 2, 3, 5, 8 and 13. These are all sequential Fibonacci numbers, suggesting a generalization of the dissection scheme based on Fibonacci numbers. The properties of the Fibonacci numbers also provide some deeper insight, why the optical illusion works so well. A square whose side length is the Fibonacci number f_n can be dissected using line segments of lengths f_n, f_, f_ in the same way the chessboard was dissected using line segments of lengths 8, 5, 3 (see graphic).Thomas Koshy: ''Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers with Applications''. Wiley, 2001, , pp. 74, 100–108 Cassini's identity states: :f_ \cdot f_ - f_n^2=(-1)^n From this it is immediately clear that the difference in area between square and rectangle must always be 1 area unit, in particular for the original chessboard paradox one has: :13 \cdot 5 -8^2= f_7 \cdot f_5 - f_6^2=(-1)^6=1 Note than for an uneven index n the area of the square is not smaller by one area unit but larger. In this case the four pieces don't create a small gap when assembled into the rectangle, but they overlap slightly instead. Since the difference in area is always 1 area unit the optical illusion can be improved using larger Fibonacci numbers allowing gap's percentage of the rectangle area to become arbitrarily small and hence for practical purposes invisible. Since the ratio of neighboring Fibonacci numbers converges rather quickly against the
golden ratio In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their summation, sum to the larger of the two quantities. Expressed algebraically, for quantities and with , is in a golden ratio to if \fr ...
\varphi, the following ratios converge quickly as well: :\frac= \frac \cdot \frac\rightarrow \varphi^2,\, \frac= \frac \cdot \frac\rightarrow \varphi^ For the four cut-outs of the square to fit together exactly to form a rectangle the small parallelogram DEBF needs to collapse into a line segment being the diagonal of the rectangle. In this case the following holds for angles in the rectangle due to being
corresponding angles In geometry, a transversal is a line that passes through two lines in the same plane at two distinct points. Transversals play a role in establishing whether two or more other lines in the Euclidean plane are parallel. The intersections of a ...
of parallels: :\angle IDE =\angle HEB, \angle DEI =\angle EBH, \angle FDG =\angle BFJ, \angle GFD =\angle JBF As a consequence the following right triangles \triangle IED, \triangle HBE , \triangle DFG and \triangle FBJ must be similar and the ratio of their legs must be the same. Due to the quick convergence stated above the according ratios of Fibonacci numbers in the assembled rectangle are almost the same: :\frac \approx \frac,\, \frac \approx \frac Hence they almost fit together exactly, this creates the optical illusion. One can also look at the angles of the parallelogram as in the original chessboard analysis. For those angles the following formulas can derived: :n\geq 4:\quad\angle FBE = \angle FDE=\arctan\left( \frac\right)\rightarrow 0^\circ :n\geq 4:\quad\angle DFB = \angle DEB=180^\circ - \arctan\left( \frac\right)\rightarrow 180^\circ Hence the angles converge quickly towards the values needed for an exact fit. It is however possible to use the dissection scheme without a creating an area mismatch, that is the four cut-outs will assemble exactly into a rectangle of the same area as the square. Instead of using Fibonacci numbers one bases the dissection directly on the golden ratio itself (see drawing). For a square of side length a this yields for the area of the rectangle :(\varphi-1)a \cdot (\varphi a)=(\varphi^2-\varphi)a^2=a^2, since \varphi^2-\varphi=1 is a property of the golden ratio.
Albrecht Beutelspacher Albrecht Beutelspacher (born 5 June 1950) is a German mathematician and founder of the Mathematikum. He is a professor emeritus at the University of Giessen, where he held the chair for geometry and discrete mathematics from 1988 to 2018. Biogr ...
, Bernhard Petri: ''Der Goldene Schnitt.'' Spektrum, Heidelberg/Berlin/Oxford 1996. , pp. 91–93 (German)


History

Hooper's paradox Hooper's paradox is a falsidical paradox based on an optical illusion. A geometric shape with an area of 32 units is dissected into four parts, which afterwards get assembled into a rectangle with an area of only 30 units. Explanation Upon clo ...
can be seen as a precursor to chess paradox. In it you have the same figure of four pieces assembled into a rectangle, however the dissected shape from which the four pieces originate is not a square yet nor are the involved line segments based on Fibonacci numbers. Hooper published the paradox now named after him under the name ''The geometric money'' in his book ''Rational Recreations''. It was however not his invention since his book was essentially a translation of the ''Nouvelles récréations physiques et mathétiques'' by
Edmé Gilles Guyot The name Edmé may refer to: *Edmé Bouchardon (1698–1762), French sculptor * Edmé Boursault (1638–1701), French writer and dramatist * Edme Castaing (1796–1823), French physician * Edmé-Louis Daubenton (1732–1786), French naturalist * G ...
(1706–1786), which had been published in France in 1769.' The first known publication of the actual chess paradox is due to the German mathematician Oskar Schlömilch. He published in 1868 it under title ''Ein geometrisches Paradoxon'' ("a geometrical Paradox") in the German science journal ''Zeitschrift für Mathematik und Physik''. In the same journal
Victor Schlegel Victor Schlegel (4 March 1843 – 22 November 1905) was a German mathematician. He is remembered for promoting the geometric algebra of Hermann Grassmann and for a method of visualizing polytopes called Schlegel diagrams. In the nineteenth ce ...
published in 1879 the article ''Verallgemeinerung eines geometrischen Paradoxons'' ("a generalisation of a geometrical paradox"), in which he generalised the construction and pointed out the connection to the Fibonacci numbers. The chessboard paradox was also a favorite of the British mathematician and author
Lewis Carroll Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet, mathematician, photographer and reluctant Anglicanism, Anglican deacon. His most notable works are ''Alice ...
, who worked on generalization as well but without publishing it. This was later discovered in his notes after his death. The American puzzle inventor
Sam Loyd Samuel Loyd (January 30, 1841 – April 10, 1911) was an American chess player, chess composer, puzzle author, and recreational mathematics, recreational mathematician. Loyd was born in Philadelphia but raised in New York City. As a chess comp ...
claimed to have presented the chessboard paradox at the world chess congress in 1858 and it was later contained in ''Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles, Tricks and Conundrums'' (1914), which was posthumously published by his son of the same name. The son stated that the assembly of the four pieces into a figure of 63 area units (see graphic at the top) was his idea. It was however already published in 1901 in the article ''Some postcard puzzles'' by Walter Dexter.'Martin Gardner: ''Mathematics, Magic and Mystery''. Courier (Dover), 1956, , pp. 129–155


See also

*
Missing square puzzle The missing square puzzle is an optical illusion used in mathematics classes to help students reason about geometrical figures; or rather to teach them not to reason using figures, but to use only textual descriptions and the axioms of geometry. ...


References


Further reading

* Jean-Paul Delahaye: ''Au pays des paradoxes''. Humensis, 2014, (French) * Miodrag Petkovic: ''Famous Puzzles of Great Mathematicians''. AMS, 2009, , pp. 14, 30–31 * A. F. Horadam: "Fibonacci Sequences and a Geometrical Paradox". In: ''Mathematics Magazine'', vol. 35, no. 1 (Jan., 1962), pp. 1–11
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* David Singmaster
"Vanishing Area Puzzles"
In: ''Recreational Mathematics Magazine'', no. 1, March 2014 * John F. Lamb Jr.: "The Rug-cutting Puzzle". In: ''The Mathematics Teacher'', Band 80, Nr. 1 (Januar 1987), pp. 12–14
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* Warren Weaver: "Lewis Carroll and a Geometrical Paradox". In: ''The American Mathematical Monthly'', vol. 45, no. 4 (Apr., 1938), pp. 234–236
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* Oskar Schlömilch: "Ein geometrisches Paradoxon". In: ''Zeitschrift für Mathematik und Physik'', vol. 13, 1868, p
162
(German) *
Victor Schlegel Victor Schlegel (4 March 1843 – 22 November 1905) was a German mathematician. He is remembered for promoting the geometric algebra of Hermann Grassmann and for a method of visualizing polytopes called Schlegel diagrams. In the nineteenth ce ...
: "Verallgemeinerung eines geometrischen Paradoxons". In: ''Zeitschrift für Mathematik und Physik'', vol. 24, 1879, pp
123–128
(German)


External links



* {{MathWorld, title=Dissection Fallacy, urlname=DissectionFallacy Optical illusions Elementary mathematics Mathematical paradoxes Recreational mathematics Geometric dissection