900.01
Definition: Modelability
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900.10
Modelability
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900.11
Modelability is topologically conceptual in generalized
principle independent
of size and time: ergo, conceptual modelability is metaphysical.
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900.12
Conceptual formulation is inherently empirical and
as such is always special
case sizing and always discloses all the physical characteristics
of existence in time.
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900.20
Synergetics
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900.30
Model vs Form
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900.31
Model is generalization; form is special case.
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900.33
Forms have size. Models are sizeless, representing
conceptuality independent
of size.
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901.00
Basic Disequilibrium LCD Triangle
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901.01
Definition
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901.02
The Basic Disequilibrium 120 LCD Spherical Triangle
of synergetics is
derived from the 15-great-circle, symmetric, three-way
grid of the spherical icosahedron.
It is the lowest common denominator of a sphere's surface,
being precisely 1/120th of that
surface as described by the icosahedron's 15 great circles.
The trigonometric data for the
Basic Disequilibrium LCD Triangle includes the data
for the entire sphere and is the basis
of all geodesic dome calculations.
(See Sec.612.00.)
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![]() Fig. 901.03 ![]() Fig. 901.03 |
901.03
As seen in Sec.
610.20
there are only three basic
structural systems in
Universe: the tetrahedron, octahedron, and icosahedron.
The largest number of equilateral
triangles in a sphere is 20: the spherical icosahedron.
Each of those 20 equiangular
spherical triangles may be subdivided equally into six
right triangles by the perpendicular
bisectors of those equiangular triangles. The utmost
number of geometrically similar
subdivisions is 120 triangles, because further spherical-triangular
subdivisions are no
longer similar. The largest number of similar triangles
in a sphere that spheric unity will
accommodate is 120: 60 positive and 60 negative. Being
spherical, they are positive and
negative, having only common arc edges which, being
curved, cannot hinge with one
another; when their corresponding angle-and-edge patterns
are vertex-mated, one bellies
away from the other: concave or convex. When one is
concave, the other is convex. (See
Illus.
901.03
and drawings section.)
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901.10
Geodesic Dome Calculations
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901.12
As in billiards or in electromagnetics, when a ball
or a photon caroms off a
wall it bounces off at an angle similar to that at which
it impinged.
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901.15
For this reason the great-circle interior mapping
of the symmetrically
superimposed other sets of 10 and 6 great circles, each
of which__together with the 15
original great circles of the icosahedron__produces the
31 great circles of the spherical
icosahedron's total number of symmetrical spinnabilities
in respect to its 30 mid-edge, 20
mid-face, and 12 vertexial poles of half-as-many-each
axes of spin.
(See Sec.
457
.)
These
symmetrically superimposed, 10- and 6-great-circles
subdivide each of the disequilibrious
120 LCD triangles into four lesser right spherical triangles.
The exact trigonometric
patterning of any other great circles orbiting the 120-LCD-triangled
sphere may thus be
exactly plotted within any one of these triangles.
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901.16
It was for this reason, plus the discovery of the
fact that the
icosahedron__among all the three-and-only prime structural
systems of Universe (see Sec.
610.20)
__required the least energetic, vectorial, structural
investment per volume of
enclosed local Universe, that led to the development
of the Basic Disequilibrium 120 LCD
Spherical Triangle and its multifrequenced triangular
subdivisioning as the basis for
calculating all highfrequency, triangulated, spherical
structures and structural subportions
of spheres; for within only one disequilibrious LCD
triangle were to be found all the
spherical chord-factor constants for any desired radius
of omnisubtriangulated spherical
structure.
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902.00
Properties of Basic Triangle
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![]() Fig. 902.01 |
902.01
Subdivision of Equilateral Triangle: Both the spherical
and planar
equilateral triangles may be subdivided into six equal
and congruent parts by describing
perpendiculars from each vertex of the opposite face.
This is demonstrated in Fig.
902.01,
where one of the six equal triangles is labeled to correspond
with the Basic Triangle in the
planar condition.
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![]() Fig. 902.10 |
902.10
Positive and Negative Alternation: The six equal subdivision
triangles of
the planar equilateral triangle are hingeable on all
of their adjacent lines and foldable into
congruent overlays. Although they are all the same,
their dispositions alternate in a
positive and negative manner, either clockwise or counterclockwise.
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![]() Fig. 902.20 |
902.20
Spherical Right Triangles: The edges of all spherical
triangles are arcs of
great circles of a sphere, and those arc edges are measured
in terms of their central angles
(i.e., from the center of the sphere). But plane surface
triangles have no inherent central
angles, and their edges are measured in relative lengths
of one of themselves or in special-
case linear increments. Spherical triangles have three
surface (corner) angles and three
central (edge) angles. The basic data for the central
angles provided below are accurate to
1/1,000 of a second of arc. On Earth
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902.22
The spherical surface angle BCE is exactly equal to
two of the arc edges of
the Basic Disequilibrium 120 LCD Triangle measured by
their central angle. BCE = arc
AC = arc CF = 20° 54' 18.57".
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![]() Fig. 902.30 |
902.30
Surface Angles and Central Angles: The Basic Triangle
ACB can be
folded on the lines CD and CE and EF. We may then bring
AC to coincide with CF and
fold BEF down to close the tetrahedron, with B congruent
with D because the arc DE =
arc EB and arc BF = arc AD. Then the tetrahedron's corner
C will fit exactly down into
the central angles AOC, COB, and AOB. (See Illus.
901.03
and
902.30.)
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902.31
As you go from one sphere-foldable great-circle set
to another in the
hierarchy of spinnable symmetries (the 3-, 4-, 6-, 12-sets
of the vector equilibrium's 25-
great-circle group and the 6-, 10-, 15-sets of the icosahedron's
31-great-circle group), the
central angles of one often become the surface angles
of the next-higher-numbered, more
complex, great-circle set while simultaneously some
(but not all) of the surface angles
become the respective next sphere's central angles.
A triangle on the surface of the
icosahedron folds itself up, becomes a tetrahedron,
and plunges deeply down into the
congruent central angles' void of the icosahedron (see
Sec.
905.47
).
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902.32
There is only one noncongruence- the last would-be
hinge, EF is an external
arc and cannot fold as a straight line; and the spherical
surface angle EBF is 36 degrees
whereas a planar 30 degrees is called for if the surface
is cast off or the arc subsides
chordally to fit the 90-60-30 right plane triangle.
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902.33
The 6 degrees of spherical excess is a beautiful whole,
rational number
excess. The 90-degree and 60-degree corners seem to
force all the excess into one corner,
which is not the way spherical triangles subside. All
the angles lose excess in proportion to
their interfunctional values. This particular condition
means that the 90 degrees would
shrink and the 60 degrees would shrink. I converted
all the three corners into seconds and
began a proportional decrease study, and it was there
that I began to encounter a ratio that
seemed rational and had the number 31 in one corner.
This seemed valid as all the
conditions were adding up to 180 degrees or 90 degrees
as rational wholes even in both
spherical and planar conditions despite certain complementary
transformations. This led to
the intuitive identification of the Basic Disequilibrium
120 LCD Triangle's foldability (and
its fall-in-ability into its own tetra-void) with the
A Quanta Module, as discussed in Sec.
910
which follows.
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