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basic_tools:pythagorean_theorem [2018/03/27 16:12]
jakobadmin [Concrete]
basic_tools:pythagorean_theorem [2021/07/04 20:27] (current)
92.75.106.64
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 <tabbox Intuitive> ​ <tabbox Intuitive> ​
  
-<note tip> +The Pythagorean theorem states ​relationship between the three sides of right-angled triangle where $a$ and $b$ represent the sides that form the right angle and $c$ is the longest side.
-Explanations in this section should contain no formulas, but instead colloquial things like you would hear them during ​coffee break or at cocktail party. +
-</​note>​+
   ​   ​
 <tabbox Concrete> ​ <tabbox Concrete> ​
-$p^2+q^2=r^2$ **if and only if** the triangle is a right triangle+$a^2+b^2=c^2$ **if and only if** the triangle is a right triangle
    
 <tabbox Abstract> ​ <tabbox Abstract> ​
  
-<note tip> +<blockquote>
-The motto in this section is: //the higher the level of abstraction,​ the better//. +
-</note>+
  
-<tabbox Why is it interesting?> ​  +Pythagoras’s Theorem,  
 +$$(ds)^2 = (dx)^2 + (dy)^2 $$
  
-The Pythagorean theorem enables us to draw accurate maps.+Riemann realized some fundamental things:  
 + 
 +  - Pythagoras’s Theorem not only told of the properties of right-angled triangles, but the function $(ds)$ (the positive square root of $(ds)^2$), was the ‘distance’ between two points;  
 +  - (ii) more than that, it was the shortest ‘distance’ between two points;  
 +  - (iii) most amazing of all, Pythagoras’s $(ds)^2$ was but one possibility - more generally, it could be written as: 
 +$$(ds)^2 = g_{xx}(dx)(dx) + +g_{xy}(dx)(dy) + g_{yx}(dy)(dx) + g_{yy}(dy)(dy) ,$$ 
 +where the $g_{ij}$ are coefficients to be determined. In Pythagoras’s Theorem, it just so happens that we have the values $g_{xx}=1$, $g_{xy}=0$, $g_{yx}=0$, and $g_{yy}=1$. 
 + 
 +In other cases (other spaces),the $g_{ij}$ need not have these particular values, and need not be constants - they could even be functions of x and y. This discussion has, so far, been in a space of only two dimensions, but Riemann generalized his ‘distance function’ still further to n dimensions. [...] 
 +Most remarkable of all, Riemann showed that all the geometric properties of an n-dimensional space can be completely determined by just this ‘distance’,​ $ds$ (the square root of the above equation. For example, if any of the coefficients,​ $g_{ij}$ , are not constant but are functions of the coordinates,​ then the corresponding space is not ‘flat’ (Euclidean) but ‘curved’. This, finally, is what ‘curved’ means: it is a measure of the departure from Euclidean space, and is determined by certain functions (Riemann’s ‘curvature functions’) of the $g_{ij}$ -coefficients. While the ‘distance’ is specific to the given space, its value is invariant as regards which coordinate representation has been adopted. 
 + 
 +<​cite>​The Lazy Universe by Coopersmith</​cite>​ 
 +</​blockquote>​ 
 +<tabbox Why is it interesting?>​  
 +   
 + 
 +The Pythagorean theorem enables us to draw accurate maps. This is achieved by covering the area that should be mapped with a virtual network of triangles. These triangles, via the Pythagorean theorem, allow us to measure distances and angles between stretches of land. This method is known as triangulation.  
 + 
 +It is still used today, for example, to deduce the locations from given satellite data.
  
 </​tabbox>​ </​tabbox>​
  
  
basic_tools/pythagorean_theorem.1522159972.txt.gz · Last modified: 2018/03/27 14:12 (external edit)