How Round Is Your Circle?: Where Engineering and Mathematics Meet

Cover
Princeton University Press, 28.02.2011 - 320 Seiten

How do you draw a straight line? How do you determine if a circle is really round? These may sound like simple or even trivial mathematical problems, but to an engineer the answers can mean the difference between success and failure. How Round Is Your Circle? invites readers to explore many of the same fundamental questions that working engineers deal with every day--it's challenging, hands-on, and fun.


John Bryant and Chris Sangwin illustrate how physical models are created from abstract mathematical ones. Using elementary geometry and trigonometry, they guide readers through paper-and-pencil reconstructions of mathematical problems and show them how to construct actual physical models themselves--directions included. It's an effective and entertaining way to explain how applied mathematics and engineering work together to solve problems, everything from keeping a piston aligned in its cylinder to ensuring that automotive driveshafts rotate smoothly. Intriguingly, checking the roundness of a manufactured object is trickier than one might think. When does the width of a saw blade affect an engineer's calculations--or, for that matter, the width of a physical line? When does a measurement need to be exact and when will an approximation suffice? Bryant and Sangwin tackle questions like these and enliven their discussions with many fascinating highlights from engineering history. Generously illustrated, How Round Is Your Circle? reveals some of the hidden complexities in everyday things.

 

Inhalt

Chapter 1 Hard Lines
1
Chapter 2 How to Draw a Straight Line
17
Chapter 3 FourBar Variations
46
Chapter 4 Building the Worlds First Ruler
65
Chapter 5 Dividing the Circle
89
Chapter 6 Falling Apart
112
Chapter 7 Follow My Leader
127
Chapter 8 In Pursuit of CoatHangers
138
Chapter 10 How Round Is Your Circle?
188
Chapter 11 Plenty of Slide Rule
227
Chapter 12 All a Matter of Balance
255
Chapter 13 Finding Some Equilibrium
277
Epilogue
296
References
297
Index
303
Urheberrecht

Chapter 9 All Approximations Are Rational
172

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Autoren-Profil (2011)

John Bryant is a retired chemical engineer. He was lecturer in engineering at the University of Exeter until 1994. Chris Sangwin is lecturer in mathematics at the University of Birmingham. He is the coauthor of Mathematics Galore!

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