This article discusses some possible answers to some of the
problems posed in the article "
Geometry and Gravity 1 " .
1. Question on curvature
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|
Positive
curvature : |
|
| Flat : |
|
| Negative
curvature : |
|
| Positive
curvature : |
more gap than
overlap |
| Flat : |
equal amounts |
| Negative
curvature : |
less gap than
overlap. |
2. Task with geodesics
The diagram depicts a tabletop
viewed from above on which
there is a pyramid with a
square base. The geodesic
starts on the tabletop, meets
and climbs the pyramid, and
eventually returns to the
tabletop. We define the
deflection angle
of the
geodesic as shown in the
diagram.
What you should have found in your investigations:
(i) the nearer the path goes to the top vertex the greater
is,
(ii) the steeper the pyramid the greater
is,
(iii) there is a complicated dependence on the angle of approach
and where the geodesic first hits the pyramid. (These two factors
together determine how near the line goes to the top vertex.)
To be more specific, consider these possible cases:
number of triangles
crossed by geodesic |
DEFLECTION
equilateral triangles
(this is obviously a special
case of the more general
isosceles
case with
)
|
DEFLECTION
isosceles triangles

|
|
2
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
To see how we can prove this, let's look at the situation when
the geodesic crosses just two of the isosceles triangles.
Remember that when they are flattened the geodesic is just a
straight line but, to find the deflection in the plane, we have
to put the pyramid up again in its initial position.
Let the geodesic be at angle
to side
.
Then angle
angle
angle
.
Using the property that the external angle equals the
sum of the interior
opposite angles, angle
, so
the geodesic makes
angle
to side
.
Now stand up the pyramid in its original
position.
At
we see that:
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|
 |
You can try proving the formulae when the geodesic crosses 3 or 4 triangles.
We see that the more triangles the geodesic crosses the greater
is,
and the nearer the line goes to the top vertex, the more triangles it
crosses. This is rule (i) above.
Also the greater the value of
, the greater
is, and the steeper the
pyramid the greater the value of
. This is rule (ii) above.
Notice that given that the geodesic crosses a certain number of triangles,
the deflection does not depend on
. However the number of triangles
crossed does depend on
and on the length
. For the equilateral
case the conditions, with all the edge lengths of one unit, are:
The geodesic crosses only two triangles if
.
The geodesic crosses only three triangles if
and
.
The geodesic crosses only four triangles if
and
,
so this is quite complicated.
**This experiment models the deflection of an object in the gravitational
field of another object, e.g. the deflection of a comet in the gravitational
field of the sun. The vertex of the pyramid represents the sun, a heavy
object producing curvature around it. The geodesic is the path of the
comet. If it is far away (so that the geodesic never touches the pyramid)
there is no deflection. If it passes very close to the vertex of the
pyramid the deflection is large.**
3. Final problem You should have found the following values of
:
For any triangulation (regular or irregular) of a sphere,
.
For any triangulation of a doughnut,
.
For any triangulation of a doughnut with two holes,
.
e.g. For a cube: gap angle at each vertex
, number of vertices
so
.
|
For a doughnut a simple triangulation
looks like the sketch.
|
 |
There are two types of vertices.
At type
, the gap angle
. At type
, the gap angle
. There are 8 of each type of
vertex so
.
|
We can stick together two one-holed
doughnuts to give a doughnut with two holes,
as seen from above in the sketch. There are now
8 type
vertices, 16 type
vertices and
4 type
vertices, where the gap angle is 0.
|
 |
.
The general rule is
where
is the number of
holes (or handles). This does not depend on the triangulation, it is a
topological invariant.
|
To see how the proof
might go, consider
a triangle with
angles
,
,
.
What is the contribution
to
? Now replace
it by 3 triangles with
angles
,
,
. What is
the contribution of this
to
?
|
 |
The theorem is the Gauss- Bonnet theorem which says that the
total curvature of a 2-dimensional closed surface depends only on
its topology.