
It's pretty clever, see if you can figure out what's going on.
That's true in terms of the usual definition of a circle, but from an analytic standpoint a circle can be described as the limit of an N-sided regular polygon as N approaches infinity (holding the distance from the center to a corner constant, which becomes the radius). The given figure is clearly not a regular polygon, though.E. Randy Dupre wrote:There's a fairly basic error of logic there. Extending this idea to an infinite number of smaller corners doesn't make a curve. It makes an infinite number of smaller corners.
Or, to put it another way, a circle is a one-sided shape. It's not a circle if it has corners, regardless of how many there are or how small they are.
It sounds like you're saying that it never really converges, not that it converges to a square. I'm probably misinterpreting something, though.Magic Knight wrote:No, it converges to the same square essentially, just turned on its edge. Like this: <>. The circumference of this circle is equal to pi. The perimeter of the fractal shape described will always be 4, and if you "zoomed in" to any part of the fractal you would see that the difference in length between the two points on any two corners and the arc between them is constant, in other words, the difference between them would never approach 0.
It's a bit tricky to explain in words.
Yes, it never really converges, but the shape would resemble a square.Ex-Cyber wrote:It sounds like you're saying that it never really converges, not that it converges to a square. I'm probably misinterpreting something, though.Magic Knight wrote:No, it converges to the same square essentially, just turned on its edge. Like this: <>. The circumference of this circle is equal to pi. The perimeter of the fractal shape described will always be 4, and if you "zoomed in" to any part of the fractal you would see that the difference in length between the two points on any two corners and the arc between them is constant, in other words, the difference between them would never approach 0.
It's a bit tricky to explain in words.
Nope! Kinetic motion is not instantaneous. If you take a stick and thrust it forwards, the thrust would 'travel' down the stick at the speed of sound through the stick.Ruldra wrote:Alright, I want you guys to explain this one:
Nope! Even if there's lots of empty space, there's still electrical repulsion and shit going on. Isn't even theoretically possible (at least not with that logic; supposedly quantum mechanics fucks this up but I have no idea how so w/e).Udderdude wrote:Your physics troll-fu is weak.
Ex-Cyber wrote:I'd guess that it converges to an octagon
Nope.Magic Knight wrote:No, it converges to the same square essentially, just turned on its edge. Like this: <>.
Yes, however that has no bearing on the argument of iterating the steps until you reach infinitesimal increments. As a counter-example to your argument, taking tangential line segments and linking them up to construct a circle then taking the limit nets you a continuous and differentiable "circle". (Big hint here btw!)E. Randy Dupre wrote:It's not a circle if it has corners, regardless of how many there are or how small they are.
It's not the "same thing" (i.e. not all curves are a series of corners), however a series of corners can be a curve. See: a parametrised square.Magic Knight wrote:In mathematics a curve is simply not the same thing as a series of corners, no matter how small they are.
Cheater.Magic Knight wrote:This guy describes it far better than I did:
Two distinct curves with the same starting point and ending point can indeed have the same length, even if one of the curves is a straight line. It all depends on your metric. Another big hint here.Some guy wrote:However by assumption since B is a straight line it has the shortest possible length, and since R is a curve distinct from B it must have length greater than B. We have two contradictory statements: l(B) = l(R) and l(B) < l(R).
You've described why the shape converges to a length of 4, not why it isn't correct. You are correct that the 5th diagram is misleading, try and figure out why.Ganelon wrote:Just notice that when you're cutting the area, you're not cutting the perimeter at all. ...
Maybe it converges to a circle that is larger than d=1? I'm not clear on the "repeat to infinity" part. Exactly what steps are being repeated? In other words, when a corner is "removed" what determines where the new corner is placed?Ganelon wrote:You've described why the shape converges to a length of 4, not why it isn't correct. You are correct that the 5th diagram is misleading, try and figure out why.Just notice that when you're cutting the area, you're not cutting the perimeter at all. ...
Nope, it converges to a circle that has a diameter of 1.ED-057 wrote:Maybe it converges to a circle that is larger than d=1?
OK... but all those line segments (no matter how small) that make up the pseudo-circle are necessarily going to originate on the circle and extend to someplace outside the circle right? (never inside the circle?) That on its own means the jagged version of the path will always be longer.Nope, it converges to a circle that has a diameter of 1.
horribleneorichieb1971 wrote:Plane is on an imaginery escalator. As the plane thrusts the escalator counters the thrust with the exact speed in the opposite direction. If the imaginery escalator always counters the thrust exactly will the plane take off?
From the plane's perspective, all that changes is that the air coming in the front is a bit less forceful - but assuming the engine isn't so powerful that it can evacuate the space in front of it (like a nuclear weapon or some other very large bomb!) it will again still take off.Specineff wrote:^^^ NeoRichie: Mythbusters already proved the plane will take off. Aerodynamics FTW.