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Academics => Education Department => Topic started by: fayt on September 09, 2014, 04:42:50 PM

Title: Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio
Post by: fayt on September 09, 2014, 04:42:50 PM
The Fibonacci numbers are Nature's numbering system. They appear everywhere in Nature, from the leaf arrangement in plants, to the pattern of the florets of a flower, the bracts of a pinecone, or the scales of a pineapple. The Fibonacci numbers are therefore applicable to the growth of every living thing, including a single cell, a grain of wheat, a hive of bees, and even all of mankind.

Golden Ratio & Golden Section : : Golden Rectangle : : Golden Spiral

In mathematics and the arts, two quantities are in the golden ratio if the ratio between the sum of those quantities and the larger one is the same as the ratio between the larger one and the smaller.

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_173.jpg)

The golden ratio is often denoted by the Greek letter phi (Φ or φ).
The figure of a golden section illustrates the geometric relationship that defines this constant. The golden ratio is an irrational mathematical constant, approximately 1.6180339887.

Golden Rectangle

A golden rectangle is a rectangle whose side lengths are in the golden ratio, 1: j (one-to-phi), that is, 1 :  or approximately 1:1.618.

A golden rectangle can be constructed with only straightedge and compass by this technique:

1. Construct a simple square

2. Draw a line from the midpoint of one side of the square to an opposite corner

3. Use that line as the radius to draw an arc that defines the height of the rectangle

4. Complete the golden rectangle

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_171.jpg)

In geometry, a golden spiral is a logarithmic spiral whose growth factor b is related to j, the golden ratio. Specifically, a golden spiral gets wider (or further from its origin) by a factor of j for every quarter turn it makes.

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_1711.gif)

Successive points dividing a golden rectangle into squares lie on
a logarithmic spiral which is sometimes known as the golden spiral.

Many  architects and artists have proportioned their works to approximate the golden ratio —especially in the form of the golden rectangle, in which the ratio of the longer side to the shorter is the golden ratio—believing this proportion to be aesthetically pleasing.

e.g.
(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_174.jpg)
Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens.
This ancient temple fits almost precisely into a golden rectangle.


(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_175.gif)
The Vetruvian Man"(The Man in Action)" by Leonardo Da Vinci
We can draw many lines of the rectangles into this figure.
Then, there are three distinct sets of Golden Rectangles:
Each one set for the head area, the torso, and the legs.

Leonardo's Vetruvian Man is sometimes confused with principles of  "golden rectangle", however that is not the case. The construction of Vetruvian Man is based on drawing a circle with its diameter equal to diagonal of the square, moving it up so it would touch the base of the square and drawing the final circle between the base of the square and the mid-point between square's center and center of the moved circle:

Golden Ratio in Nature

Adolf Zeising, whose main interests were mathematics and philosophy, found the golden ratio expressed in the arrangement of branches along the stems of plants and of veins in leaves. He extended his research to the skeletons of animals and the branchings of their veins and nerves, to the proportions of chemical compounds and the geometry of crystals, even to the use of proportion in artistic endeavors. In these phenomena he saw the golden ratio operating as a universal law.[38] Zeising wrote in 1854:

The Golden Ratio is a universal law in which is contained the ground-principle of all formative striving for beauty and completeness in the realms of both nature and art, and which permeates, as a paramount spiritual ideal, all structures, forms and proportions, whether cosmic or individual, organic or inorganic, acoustic or optical; which finds its fullest realization, however, in the human form.


(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_176.jpg)

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_1710.gif)

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_178.gif)

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_179.gif)

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/fib_nautilus2.jpg)



Post Merge: September 09, 2014, 05:54:14 PM
FIBONACCI NUMBERS

About Fibonacci

Fibonacci was known in his time and is still recognized today as the "greatest European mathematician of the middle ages." He was born in the 1170's and died in the 1240's and there is now a statue commemorating him located at the Leaning Tower end of the cemetery next to the Cathedral in Pisa. Fibonacci's name is also perpetuated in two streetsthe quayside Lungarno Fibonacci in Pisa and the Via Fibonacci in Florence.
His full name was Leonardo of Pisa, or Leonardo Pisano in Italian since he was born in Pisa.  He called himself Fibonacci which was short for Filius Bonacci, standing for "son of Bonacci", which was his father's name. Leonardo's father( Guglielmo Bonacci) was a kind of customs officer in the North African town of Bugia, now called Bougie. So Fibonacci grew up with a North African education under the Moors and later travelled extensively around the Mediterranean coast. He then met with many merchants and learned of their systems of doing arithmetic. He soon realized the many advantages of the "Hindu-Arabic" system over all the others. He was one of the first people to introduce the Hindu-Arabic number system into Europe-the system we now use today- based of ten digits with its decimal point and a symbol for zero: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. and 0
His book on how to do arithmetic in the decimal system, called Liber abbaci (meaning Book of the Abacus or Book of calculating) completed in 1202 persuaded many of the European mathematicians of his day to use his "new" system. The book goes into detail (in Latin) with the rules we all now learn in elementary school for adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing numbers altogether with many problems to illustrate the methods in detail.

Fibonacci Numbers

The sequence, in which each number is the sum of the two preceding numbers is known as the Fibonacci series: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597, 2584, 4181, ...  (each number is the sum of the previous two).

The ratio of successive pairs is so-called golden section (GS) - 1.618033989 . . . . .
whose reciprocal is 0.618033989 . . . . . so that we have 1/GS = 1 + GS.

The Fibonacci sequence, generated by the rule f1 = f2 = 1 , fn+1 = fn + fn-1,
is well known in many different areas of mathematics and science. 

Pascal's Triangle and Fibonacci Numbers

The triangle was studied by B. Pascal, although it had been described centuries earlier by Chinese mathematician Yanghui (about 500 years earlier, in fact) and the Persian astronomer-poet Omar Khayyám.

Pascal's Triangle is described by the following formula:

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/fib_p1img1427.gif)

(http://www.world-mysteries.com/fib_triangle.gif)

The "shallow diagonals" of Pascal's triangle
sum to Fibonacci numbers.

It is quite amazing that the Fibonacci number patterns occur so frequently in nature ( flowers, shells, plants, leaves, to name a few) that this phenomenon appears to be one of the principal "laws of nature". Fibonacci sequences appear in biological settings, in two consecutive Fibonacci numbers, such as branching in trees, arrangement of leaves on a stem, the fruitlets of a pineapple, the flowering of artichoke, an uncurling fern and the arrangement of a pine cone. In addition, numerous claims of Fibonacci numbers or golden sections in nature are found in popular sources, e.g. relating to the breeding of rabbits, the spirals of shells, and the curve of waves  The Fibonacci numbers are also found in the family tree of honeybees.
Title: Re: Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio
Post by: ShadowShaman on January 27, 2016, 06:54:46 AM
Parang yung ibang pics pilit na talaga para mapakita ang golden ratio
Title: Re: Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio
Post by: charliehouse on February 08, 2016, 08:18:10 PM
Dagdag info lang:

The golden ratio can even be found at the faces of the ladies whom we considered as "pretty".
Title: Re: Fibonacci Numbers in Nature & the Golden Ratio
Post by: naruto789544 on April 19, 2016, 10:53:10 PM
interesting piece of article... hope the images can be re-upped so i can imagine in better... :)
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