sdi: Oil painting of the Heliconian Muse whispering inspiration to Hesiod. (Default)
sdi ([personal profile] sdi) wrote2022-11-07 02:02 pm
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Construction of a Regular Pentagon, Using Only a Compass

As a computer programmer, I'm enamored with the notion of economy: that is, doing as much as one can with as little as possible. It is perhaps because of this that I have always found geometry appealing: one endeavors to begin with the simplest tools possible—a collapsing compass and a straightedge—and, using these, build oneself ever-more-powerful tools, allowing one to easily draw figures of tremendous sophistication.

So it was with some amusement that I recently learned that one does not even need a straightedge: everything that can be constructed with a compass and straightedge can be constructed with a compass alone. (We're assuming that one can draw straight lines after the construction is complete to make the construction clear, but one cannot use a straightedge to find the endpoints of any of those lines!)

I haven't studied the proof of that in any depth, yet, but since we have a few fans of geometry here, I thought I might post one of my favorite compass-only constructions, which is due to Kurt Hofstetter.

Given. Points A and B.

I. Construct a circle from A to B.

II. Construct a circle from B to A.

III. Construct a circle between the two intersection points of circles I and II.

IV. Construct a circle from A to the intersection point of circles II and III not on circle I.

V. Construct a circle from B to the intersection point of circles I and III not on circle II.

VI. Construct a circle from one of the intersection points of circles IV and V to the center of circle III.

VII. Construct a circle from the other intersection point of circles IV and V to the center of circle III.

Result. The five points shown form a regular pentagon.

[personal profile] violetcabra 2022-11-07 08:53 pm (UTC)(link)
That is so lovely ---- thank you for sharing this! The method I've used is somewhat different, being the one outlined in Miranda Lundy's little book on sacred geometry. I really love how you made these illustrations look with the SVG :-)

[personal profile] violetcabra 2022-11-07 10:09 pm (UTC)(link)
That makes a lot of sense given both the ratios of the segments of a pentagram and also how lovely your svg turned out.
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