Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Introduction
- Contents
- Learning from the Medieval Master Masons: A Geometric Journey through the Labyrinth
- Dem Bones Ain't Dead: Napier's Bones in the Classroom
- The Towers of Hanoi
- Rectangular Protractors and the Mathematics Classroom
- Was Pythagoras Chinese?
- Geometric String Models of Descriptive Geometry
- The French Curve
- Area Without Integration: Make Your Own Planimeter
- Historical Mechanisms for Drawing Curves
- Learning from the Roman Land Surveyors: A Mathematical Field Exercise
- Equating the Sun: Geometry, Models, and Practical Computing in Greek Astronomy
- Sundials: An Introduction to Their History, Design, and Construction
- Why is a Square Square and a Cube Cubical?
- The Cycloid Pendulum Clock of Christiaan Huygens
- Build a Brachistochrone and Captivate Your Class
- Exhibiting Mathematical Objects: Making Sense of your Department's Material Culture
- About the Authors
Historical Mechanisms for Drawing Curves
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Introduction
- Contents
- Learning from the Medieval Master Masons: A Geometric Journey through the Labyrinth
- Dem Bones Ain't Dead: Napier's Bones in the Classroom
- The Towers of Hanoi
- Rectangular Protractors and the Mathematics Classroom
- Was Pythagoras Chinese?
- Geometric String Models of Descriptive Geometry
- The French Curve
- Area Without Integration: Make Your Own Planimeter
- Historical Mechanisms for Drawing Curves
- Learning from the Roman Land Surveyors: A Mathematical Field Exercise
- Equating the Sun: Geometry, Models, and Practical Computing in Greek Astronomy
- Sundials: An Introduction to Their History, Design, and Construction
- Why is a Square Square and a Cube Cubical?
- The Cycloid Pendulum Clock of Christiaan Huygens
- Build a Brachistochrone and Captivate Your Class
- Exhibiting Mathematical Objects: Making Sense of your Department's Material Culture
- About the Authors
Summary
Introduction
If you have a collection of straight sticks that are pinned (hinged) to one another, then you can say you have a linkage like in the windshield wipers in your car or in some desk lamps. Linkages can also be robot arms. It is possible that our own arms caused people to start to think about the use of linkages.
In this paper I will discuss how linkages and other historical mechanisms (that involve sliding in groove or rolling circles) can be used for drawing different curves and in engineering to design machine motion. This knowledge was very popular at the end of the 19th century, but much of it was forgotten during most of the 20th Century. Now there is, among mathematicians and engineers, renewed interest in these mechanisms and in kinematics — the geometry of pure motion. Study of these mechanisms can be used in classrooms as a way to show interconnections between mathematics and technology and provide a bridge to interesting history that can bring meaning into the classroom. For examples, Descartes considered only those curves that could be drawn with mechanical devices. Curves were constructed from geometrical actions, many of which were pictured as mechanical apparatuses. After curves had been drawn, Descartes introduced coordinates and then analyzed the curve-drawing actions in order to arrive at an equation that represented the curve. Equations did not create curves; curves gave rise to equations. [10]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Hands on HistoryA Resource for Teaching Mathematics, pp. 89 - 104Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 2007
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