1101.00
Triangular Geodesics Transformational Projection
Model
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1101.01
Description
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![]() Fig. 1101.02 |
1101.02
The transformational projection is contained entirely
within a plurality of
great-circle-bounded spherical triangles (or quadrangles
or multipolygons) of constant,
uniform-edge-module (invariant, central-angle-incremented)
subdivisioning whose
constantly identical edge length permits their hinging
into flat mosaic-tile continuities. The
planar phase of the transformation permits a variety
of hinged-open, completely flat,
reorientable, unit-area, world mosaics. The transformational
projection model
demonstrates how the mosaic tiles migrate zonally. It
demonstrates how each tile
transforms cooperatively but individually, internally
from compound curvature to flat
surface without interborder-crossing deformation of
the mapping data.
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1102.00
Construction of the Model
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1102.01
The empirical procedure modeling that demonstrates
the transformational
projection is constructed as follows:
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1102.05
Next, one of the two ends of each of the three steel
straps is joined to an end
of one of the other two straps by means of their end
rods being removed and one of the
rods being reinserted through their mutual end holes
as one strap is superimposed on the
other with their respective end holes being brought
into register, whereafter, hollow
"stovepipe" rivets1 of complementary inside-outside diameters
are fastened through the
end holes to provide a journal through which one of
the former end rods is now
perpendicularly inserted, thus journaled pivotally together
like a pair of scissors. The three
straps joined through their registered terminal holes
form an equilateral triangle of
overlapping and rotatably journaled ends. (See Illus.
1101.02F.)
(Footnote 1: The rivets resemble hollow, tublike grommets.) |
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1102.06
It will next be seen that a set of steel rods of equal
length may be inserted an
equal distance through each of the holes of each of
the straps, including the hollow
journaled holes at the ends, in such a manner that each
rod is perpendicular to the parallel
surfaces of the straps; therefore, each rod is parallel
to the others. All of the rods
perpendicularly piercing any one of the straps are in
a row, and all of their axes are
perpendicular to one common plane. The three unique
planes of the three rows of rods are
perpendicular to each of the straps whose vertical faces
form a triangular prism
intersecting one another at the central axes of their
three comer rods' common hinge
extensions. Each of the three planes is parallel to
any one rod in each of the other two
planes. (See Illus.
1101.02I.)
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1103.00
Flexing of Steel Straps
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1103.03
Now if all the ends of all the rods on one face side
or the other of the
triangle (since released to its original flat condition
of first assembly), and if all of the three
rows in the planes perpendicular to each of the three
straps forming the triangle are
gathered in a common point, then each of the three spring-steel-strap
and rod sets will
yield in separate arcs, and the three planes of rods
perpendicular to them will each rotate
around its chordal axis formed between the two outer
rivet points of its arc, so that the
sections of the planes on the outer side of the chords
of the three arcs, forming what is
now a constant-length, equiedged (but simultaneously
changing from flat to arced
equiedged), equiangled (but simultaneously altering
corner-angled), spherical triangle, will
move toward one another, and the sections of the planes
on the inner side of the chords of
the three arcs forming the constant, equiedged (but
simultaneously changing flat-to-arc
equiedged), and equiangled (but simultaneously altering
corner-angled), spherical triangle
will rotate away from one another. The point to which
all rod ends are gathered will thus
become the center of a sphere on the surface of which
the three arcs occur, as arcs of
great circles__for their planes pass through the center
of the same sphere. The sums of the
corner angles of the spherical triangles add to more
than the 180 degrees of the flat
triangle, as do all spherical triangles with the number
of degrees and fractions thereof that
the spherical triangle is greater than its chorded plane
triangle being called the spherical
excess, the provision of which excess is shared proportionately
in each corner of the
spherical triangle; the excess in each comer is provided
in our model by the scissorslike
angular increase permitted by the pivotal journals at
each of the three corners of the steel-
strap-edged triangle. (See Illus.
1101.02H.)
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1104.00
Constant Zenith of Flat and Spherical Triangles
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1105.00
Minima Transformation
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![]() Fig. 1105.01 |
1105.01
If the rods are pushed uniformly through the spring-steel
straps so that
increasing or decreasing common lengths of rod extend
on the side of the triangle where
the rods are gathered at a common point, then, as a
result, varying ratios of radii length in
respect to the fixed steel-strap arc length will occur.
The longer the rods, the larger will be
the sphere of which they describe a central tetrahedral
segment, and the smaller the
relative proportional size of the spherical surface
triangle bounded by the steel springs__as
compared to the whole implicit spherical surface. Because
the spherical triangle edge
length is not variable, being inherent in the original
length of the three identical steel
springs, the same overall length can accommodate only
an ever smaller spherical surface
arc (central-angle subtension) whenever the radii are
lengthened to produce a greater
sphere.
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![]() Fig. 1105.03 |
1105.03
Constituting the minima transformation obtainable by
this process of
gathering of rod ends, it will be seen that the minima
is a flat circle with the rods as spokes
of its wheel. Obviously, if the spokes are further shortened,
they will not reach the hub.
Therefore, the minima is not 0__or no sphere at all__but
simply the smallest sphere
inherent in the original length of the steel springs.
At the minima of transformation, the
sphere is at its least radius, i.e., smallest volume.
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![]() Fig. 1105.04 |
1105.04
As the rods are lengthened again, the implied sphere's
radius__ergo, its
volume__grows, and, because of the nonyielding length
of the outer steel springs, the
central angles of the arc decrease, as does also the
relative size of the equilateral,
equiangular spherical triangle as, with contraction,
it approaches one of the poles of the
sphere of transformation. The axis running between the
two poles of most extreme
transformation of the spherical triangle we are considering
runs through all of its
transforming triangular centers between its__never attained__minimum-spherical-excess,
smallest-conceivable, local, polar triangle on the ever-enlarging
sphere, then reversing
toward its largest equatorial, three- 180-degree-corners,
hemisphere__area phase on its
smallest sphere, with our triangle thereafter decreasing
in relative spherical surface area as
the__never attained__smallest triangle and the sphere
itself enlarge toward the__also
never attained__cosmically largest sphere. It must be
remembered that the triangle gets
smaller as it approaches one pole, the complementary
triangle around the other pole gets
correspondingly larger. It must also be recalled that
the surface areas of both the positive
and negative complementary spherical triangles together
always comprise the whole
surface of the sphere on which they co-occur. Both the
positive and negative polar-
centered triangles are themselves the outer surface
triangles of the two complementary
tetrahedra whose commonly congruent internal axis is
at the center of the same sphere
whose total volume is proportionately subdivided between
the two tetrahedra.
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