Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Reuleaux triangle

Encyclopedia : R : RE : REU : Reuleaux triangle


A Reuleaux polygon is a polygon that is a curve of constant width - that is, a curve in which all diameters are the same length. The best-known version is the Reuleaux triangle. Both are named after Franz Reuleaux, a 19th-century German engineer who did pioneering work on ways that machines translate one type of motion into another, although it was known before his time.

The Reuleaux triangle is the simplest nontrivial example of a curve of constant width - a curve in which the distance between two opposite parallel tangent lines to its boundary is the same, regardless of the direction of those two parallel lines. (The trivial example would be a circle.)

To construct the Reuleaux triangle, start with an equilateral triangle. Center a compass at one vertex and sweep out the (minor) arc between the other two vertices. Do the same with the compass centered at each of the other vertices. Delete the original triangle. The result is a curve of constant width. Equivalently, given an equilateral triangle T of side length s, take the boundary of the intersection of the disks with radius s centered at the vertices of T.

By the Blaschke-Lebesgue theorem, the Reuleaux triangle has the least area of any curve of given constant width. This area is [(\pi - \sqrt3)d^2], where d is the constant diameter.

The Reuleaux triangle can be generalized to regular polygons with an odd number of sides. See also the British Twenty Pence and Fifty Pence coins.

Trivia

Three-dimensional version

The intersection of the balls of radius s centered at the vertices of a regular tetrahedron with side length s is called the Reuleaux tetrahedron, but is not a surface of constant width. It can, however, be made into a surface of constant width by rotating it about its axis.

External link

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: