Spiral of Theodorus


In geometry, the spiral of Theodorus is a spiral composed of right triangles, placed edge-to-edge. It was named after Theodorus of Cyrene.

Construction

The spiral is started with an isosceles right triangle, with each leg having unit length. Another right triangle is formed, an automedian right triangle with one leg being the hypotenuse of the prior triangle and the other leg having length of 1; the length of the hypotenuse of this second triangle is square root of 3|. The process then repeats; the nth triangle in the sequence is a right triangle with side lengths and 1, and with hypotenuse. For example, the 16th triangle has sides measuring 4, 1 and hypotenuse of.

History and uses

Although all of Theodorus' work has been lost, Plato put Theodorus into his dialogue Theaetetus, which tells of his work. It is assumed that Theodorus had proved that all of the square roots of non-square integers from 3 to 17 are irrational by means of the Spiral of Theodorus.
Plato does not attribute the irrationality of the square root of 2 to Theodorus, because it was well known before him. Theodorus and Theaetetus split the rational numbers and irrational numbers into different categories.

Hypotenuse

Each of the triangles' hypotenuses hn gives the square root of the corresponding natural number, with h1 =.
Plato, tutored by Theodorus, questioned why Theodorus stopped at. The reason is commonly believed to be that the hypotenuse belongs to the last triangle that does not overlap the figure.

Overlapping

In 1958, Erich Teuffel proved that no two hypotenuses will ever coincide, regardless of how far the spiral is continued. Also, if the sides of unit length are extended into a line, they will never pass through any of the other vertices of the total figure.

Extension

Theodorus stopped his spiral at the triangle with a hypotenuse of. If the spiral is continued to infinitely many triangles, many more interesting characteristics are found.

Growth rate

Angle

If φn is the angle of the nth triangle, then:
Therefore, the growth of the angle φn of the next triangle n is:
The sum of the angles of the first k triangles is called the total angle φ for the kth triangle. It grows proportionally to the square root of k, with a bounded correction term c2:
where
.

Radius

The growth of the radius of the spiral at a certain triangle n is

Archimedean spiral

The Spiral of Theodorus approximates the Archimedean spiral. Just as the distance between two windings of the Archimedean spiral equals mathematical constant pi, as the number of spins of the spiral of Theodorus approaches infinity, the distance between two consecutive windings quickly approaches π.
The following is a table showing of two windings of the spiral approaching pi:
Winding No.:Calculated average winding-distanceAccuracy of average winding-distance in comparison to π
23.159203799.44255%
33.144345599.91245%
43.1442899.91453%
53.14239599.97447%
→ π→ 100%

As shown, after only the fifth winding, the distance is a 99.97% accurate approximation to π.

Continuous curve

The question of how to interpolate the discrete points of the spiral of Theodorus by a smooth curve was proposed and answered in by analogy with Euler's formula for the gamma function as an interpolant for the factorial function. Davis found the function
which was further studied by his student Leader and by Iserles. An axiomatic characterization of this function is given in as the unique function that satisfies the functional equation
the initial condition and monotonicity in both argument and modulus; alternative conditions and weakenings are also studied therein. An alternative derivation is given in.
An analytic continuation of Davis' continuous form of the Spiral of Theodorus which extends in the opposite direction from the origin is given in.
In the figure the nodes of the original Theodorus spiral are shown as small green circles. The blue ones are those, added in the opposite direction of the spiral.
Only nodes with the integer value of the polar radius are numbered in the figure.
The dashed circle in the coordinate origin is the circle of curvature at.