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Archimedean spiral

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Three 360° turnings of one arm of an Archimedean spiral
Three 360° turnings of one arm of an Archimedean spiral

An Archimedean spiral (also arithmetic spiral), is a spiral named after the 3rd-century-BC Greek mathematician Archimedes; it is the locus of points corresponding to the locations over time of a point moving away from a fixed point with a constant speed along a line which rotates with constant angular velocity. Equivalently, in polar coordinates (r, θ) it can be described by the equation

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with real numbers a and b. Changing the parameter a will turn the spiral, while b controls the distance between successive turnings.

Archimedes described such a spiral in his book On Spirals.

This Archimedean spiral is distinguished from the logarithmic spiral by the fact that successive turnings of the spiral have a constant separation distance (equal to 2πb if θ is measured in radians), while in a logarithmic spiral these distances form a geometric progression.

Note that the Archimedean spiral has two arms, one for θ > 0 and one for θ < 0. The two arms are smoothly connected at the origin. Only one arm is shown on the accompanying graph. Taking the mirror image of this arm across the y-axis will yield the other arm.

One method of squaring the circle, by relaxing the strict limitations on the use of straightedge and compass in ancient Greek geometric proofs, makes use of an Archimedean spiral.

Sometimes the term Archimedean spiral is used for the more general group of spirals

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The normal Archimedean spiral occurs when x = 1. Other spirals falling into this group include the hyperbolic spiral, Fermat's spiral, and the lituus. Virtually all static spirals appearing in nature are logarithmic spirals, not Archimedean ones. Many dynamic spirals (such as the Parker spiral of the solar wind, or the pattern made by a Catherine's wheel) are Archimedean.

Contents

Applications

Image:Two moving spirals scroll pump.gif
Mechanism of a scroll pump

The Archimedean spiral has a plethora of real-world applications. Scroll compressors, made from two interleaved Archimedean spirals of the same size, are used for compressing liquids and gases.[1] The coils of watch balance springs and the grooves of very early gramophone records form Archimedean spirals, making the grooves evenly spaced and maximizing the amount of music that could be fit onto the record (although this was later changed to allow better sound quality).[2] Asking for a patient to draw an Archimedean spiral is a way of quantifying human tremor; this information helps in diagnosing neurological diseases. Archimedean spirals are also used in DLP projection systems to minimize the "Rainbow Effect", making it look as if multiple colors are displayed at the same time, when in reality red, green, and blue are being cycled extremely fast.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sakata, Hirotsugu and Masayuki Okuda. Fluid compressing device having coaxial spiral members. Retrieved on 2006-11-25.
  2. ^ Penndorf, Ron. Early Development of the LP. Retrieved on 2005-11-25.
  3. ^ Wilson, Tracy V.. Adding Color and the Reliability of DLP. Retrieved on 2005-11-25.


External links

bg:Архимедова спирала el:Σπείρα του Αρχιμήδη es:Espiral de Arquímedes fr:Spirale d'Archimède it:Spirale archimedea hu:Arkhimédészi spirál nl:Archimedes-spiraal nn:Arkimedisk spiral pl:Spirala Archimedesa pt:Espiral de Arquimedes ru:Архимедова спираль tr:Arşimet spirali uk:Спіраль Архімеда

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