Sphericon

Sphericon animation
The sphericon as a ruled surface.The two identical bicone halves are marked in different colors.

The sphericon is a solid that has a continuous developable surface with two congruent semi circular edges, and four vertices that define a square. It is a member of a special family of rollers that, while being rolled on a flat surface, bring all the points of their surface to contact with the surface they are rolling on. It was first introduced by the Israeli game and toy inventor David Haran Hirsch who patented it in Israel in 1980.[1] It was given its name by Colin Roberts, who also explored it.

Construction

It may be constructed from a bicone (a double cone) with an apex angel of 90 degrees, by splitting the bicone along a plane through both apexes, rotating one of the two halves by 90 degrees, and reattaching the two halves.[2] Alternatively, the surface of a sphericon can be formed by cutting and gluing a paper template in the form of four circular sectors (with central angles π/√2) joined edge-to-edge.[3]

Geometric properties

The surface area of a sphericon with radius r is given by:

The volume is given by:

exactly half the volume of a sphere with the same radius.

History

Drawings of a two half-discs device for generating a meander motion, and of a sphericon, taken from the original patent application filed by David Hirsch.

In 1979 David Hirsch invented a device for generating a meander motion. The device consisted of two perpendicular half discs joined at their axes of symmetry. While examining various configurations of this device, he discovered that the form created by joining the two half discs, exactly at their diameter centers, is actually a skeletal structure of a solid made of two half bicones, joined at their square cross-sections with an offset angle of 90 degrees, and that the two objects have the exact same meander motion. Hirsch filed a patent in Israel in 1980, and a year later, a pull toy named Wiggler Duck, based on Hirsch's device was introduced by Playskool Company. In October 1999, Ian Stewart wrote an article "Cone with a Twist" on the subject in his Mathematical Recreations column of Scientific American.[4] This sparked quite a bit of interest in the shape, and has been used by Tony Phillips to develop theories about mazes, and is also used as a logo and name by the Israeli research company Sphericon Ltd.

Comparison of an oloid (left) and sphericon (right) —
in the SVG image, move over the image to rotate the shapes

See also

References

  1. David Haran Hirsch (1980): "Patent no. 59720: A device for generating a meander motion; Patent drawings; Patent application form; Patent claims
  2. Paul J. Roberts (2010). "The Sphericon". Archived from the original on 2012-07-23.
  3. A mesh at www.pjroberts.com/sphericon, archived by web.archive.org
  4. "Mathematical Recreations: Cone with a Twist", Scientific American, October 1999

External links

Look up sphericon in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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