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Mathematics and art

The beauty of equations
Nov 16th 2000 | MAUBEUGE
From The Economist print edition



AP
Yes, but is it art?

FORTIFICATIONS don’t have to be pretty, but they often are. A few kilometres south of the Belgian border, the French town of Maubeuge is surrounded by a seven-pointed star. The moat, overlooked by geometric walkways that lead up and out into thin air, seems more like an eccentric’s playground than a landscape tailored by Vauban to keep out invaders. War is ugly, but its constraints evidently can beautify.

Constraints do that everywhere. Which is why those who study the subject of constraints (mathematicians) sometimes feel a kinship with those who are in the business of making beautiful things (artists). At the eighth New York Digital Salon, which opened last week in the city’s School of Visual Arts and online they compete for your appreciation. “Scenic views abound”, a picture of tourists on the moon, is shown alongside “Extruded Hilbert Curve over a charged Hexagonal Truchet Pattern”, a mathematical image from a world that is in some ways more real than an imaginary lunar tourist trap. At a recent conference held just inside Maubeuge’s walls, the two worlds met for three days of abstract curves, weird shapes on screens and, of course, equations on blackboards.

For, given any mathematical statement, a shape that the eye can savour is never far away. Take addition: 3+4=7 is trivial, but x+y=7 is an equation. Even better, it also defines a line: values for x and y are now constrained to certain combinations such as 3+4, 5+2 and an infinite number of other pairs. In a graph of x against y they form a line thinner and straighter than any pencil can draw.

Such graphs may help a student to fathom what the formula is about. In higher mathematics, graphs are often indispensable in allowing researchers to deal with baffling theoretical structures—as they always have been. Konrad Polthier, of the Technical University of Berlin, pointed out the lengths to which his predecessors in the study of “minimal surfaces” were prepared to go to obtain pictures of what they were doing. In the late 19th century, geometers from Göttingen would commission plaster models of certain minimal surfaces, costing exorbitant sums that Dr Polthier would be lucky to extract from his university’s treasurer. Fortunately for him, there now exist “three-dimensional printers” that, at a cost of a few hundred dollars, will convert one of the complicated surfaces he draws on his computer into something he can grasp. The latest models even do full colour, allowing mathematicians to get an even better feel for their subjects and opening new avenues for artists who come along for the ride.

(....)







Websites

Konrad Polthier of the Technical University of Berlin and Michael Field of the University of Houston post more on their theories, with examples.




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