Activities
Activities
Activities
Activities
For over 200 years, mathematicians have been attempting to find accurate values for π and
whether this number has any pattern to its decimal form. An early approxiation was given
by Archimedes (in about 250BC) who used 96-sided regular polygons to show that
10 1
3 <π <3 .
71 7
Here we will follow a quick method.
(a) (b)
1
90˚ 1
2. Deduce the upper and lower bounds for π based on your answers to Question 1.
[Hint: the area of the circle is π × 12 = π . )
Extension
Generalise your method to a regular n-sided polygon.
α
1. For the inscribed polygon, what is the angle α ?
O
2. Find the total area of the inscribed polygon.
3. What is the area of: (a) the inscribed polygon
(b) the circumscribed polygon?
4. (a) Deduce bounds for π when: (i) n = 96 (ii) n = 1000 (iii) n = 1000 000 .
(b) In (i) how accurate is your estimate of the value of π ?
According to legend, Princess Dido, a clever Greek princess fleeing from the tyranny of her
brother, landed at Constantinople in Turkey and gained a concession from the local people,
who said that she could have all the land which could be encompassed by the skin of an ox.
She took the biggest ox skin she could find, cut it into very thin, long strips which she
joined together and then placed on the ground, claiming all the land within the skin.
The shape she used to make the enclosed area as large as possible was a circle.
L
For a circle of radius a, A = π a2 and L = 2π a , or a = .
2π
2
L2
A = π =
L
Substituting for a:
2π 4π
4π A
Hence for a circle, = 1.
L2
This result is used to measure how close any plane shape is to a circle and the quantity 4π A
is called the Isoperimetric Quotient (IQ) of the shape. L2
Questions
1. Find the IQ for the following plane shapes and show that they support the conjecture above:
(a) square, side a (b) rectangle, sides a and 2a
(c) rectangle, sides a and 5a (d) equilateral triangle
(e) '3, 4, 5' triangle (f) semicircle
(g) '5, 12, 13' triangle (h) regular pentagon.
Extension
1. For a regular n-sided polygon, find an expression for its area and perimeter.
2. Use these results to find a formula for the IQ of an n-sided polygon.
3. Evaluate for n = 10 , n = 100 , n = 1000 .
4. What conjecture can you make?
You are probably familiar with the Arithmetic Mean, A, of a set of positive numbers. It is
defined by:
A = ( a1 + a2 + a3 + ... + an ) .
1
n
Two other types of mean values are:
1
(1) the Geometric Mean, G, defined by: G = ( a1 a2 a3 ... an ) n
–1
1 1 1 1
(2) the Harmonic Mean, H, defined by: H = n + + + ... +
a1 a2 a3 an
Questions
1. (a) For the five values, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, evaluate A, G and H.
(b) For the five values, 3, 3, 3, 3 and 3, evaluate A, G and H.
[Note: When all the values are equal, then A = G = H (= common value).
This is a property which any mean value must have.]
2. Our conjecture is that for any set of values, A > G > H , and the equality occurs only
when all the values are equal.
Show that this inequality holds for your own choice of values.
a+b 2
A = , G= ab , H =
2 1 1
+
a b
Extension
Use a similar method to prove that G ≥ H .
Linear Programming was developed during the Second World War to solve complicated
optimisation problems.
Sample Problem
To find the best (cheapest) way to organise coaches
for a school trip for 560 people (pupils and staff).
Method
Let x = no. of double deckers and y = number of single deckers.
2. (a) What is the total number of passengers who can be carried in x double deckers
and y single deckers?
y
(b) Write down the appropriate inequality to be satisfied.
20
3. On an appropriate set of axes, similar to those opposite, 18
illustrate all three inequalities on a graph by first 16
drawing x = 0 , x = 6 , etc. 14
12
4. The boundaries of these lines define the feasible region , 10
in which all the inequalities are satisfied. 8
Show this region by shading.
6