The golden ratio
Project
The Golden Ratio
and the human body
This exercise is divided into 3 parts:
A. The golden ratio
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Distance from the ground to your belly button
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Distance from your belly button to the top of your head
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Distance from the ground to your knees
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Distances A, B and C
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Length of your hand
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Distance from your wrist to your elbow
Now calculate the following ratios:
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Distance from the ground to your belly button / Distance from your belly button to the top of your head
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Distance from the ground to your belly button / Distance from the ground to your knees
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Distance C / Distance B
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Distance B / Distance A
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Distance from your wrist to your elbow / Length of your hand
Write all your results on the following table:
Student name |
Ratio 1 |
Ratio 2 |
Ratio 3 |
Ratio 4 |
Ratio 5 |
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... |
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Average |
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Can you see anything special about these ratios?
B. The fibonacci sequence
Now look at the following sequence of numbers:
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89...
The following number is the sum of the previous two. This is Fibonacci's sequence.
Now do the following ratios on a calculator and give answers in non-fraction numbers:
1/2 =
3/2 =
5/3 =
8/5 =
13/8 =
21/13 =
34/21 =
55/34 =
89/55 =
As you go on and on dividing a number in the sequence by the previous number you get closer and closer to the number you discovered in the first part of the exercise, phi = $\phi$ = 1.6180339887498948482.
C. The golden rectangle
We can also draw a rectangle with the fibonacci number's ratio. From this rectangle we can then derive interesting shapes.
First colour in two 1x1 squares on a piece of squared paper:
Then draw a 2x2 square on top of this one:
Then draw a 3x3 square to the right of these:
Then draw a 5x5 square under these:
Then draw a 8x8 square to the left of these:
Then draw a 13x13 square on top of these:
We could go on like this forever, making bigger and bigger rectangles in which the ratio of length/ width gets closer and closer to the Fibonacci number.
Then place the compass tip on the bottom left corner of the 2x2 square and draw an arc like this:
Then place the compass tip on the left hand, top corner of the 3x3 square and do the same:
Do the same for the other three squares to obtain:
This shape is widely found in nature, can you find any other examples?