31.10.2014 Views

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

340 HERON OF ALEXANDRIA<br />

lines ', and he observes that, ' as the problem is clearly not<br />

rational, we shall, for practical convenience, make the division,<br />

as exactly as possible, in the following<br />

way.' AB is the side <strong>of</strong> an<br />

equilateral triangle inscribed in the<br />

circle. Let CD be the parallel<br />

diameter, the centre <strong>of</strong> the circle,<br />

and join A0, BO, AD, DB. Then<br />

shall the segment ABD be very<br />

nearly one-third <strong>of</strong> the circle.<br />

For,<br />

since AB is the side <strong>of</strong> an equilateral<br />

triangle in the circle, the<br />

sector OAEB is one-third <strong>of</strong> the<br />

circle. And the triangle A OB forming part <strong>of</strong> the sector<br />

is equal to the triangle ABB] therefore the segment AEB<br />

rplus the triangle ABD is equal to one-third <strong>of</strong> the circle,<br />

and the segment ABD only differs from this by the small<br />

segment on BD as base, which may be neglected. Euclid's<br />

proposition is to cut <strong>of</strong>f one-third (or any fraction) <strong>of</strong> a circle<br />

between two parallel chords (see vol. i, pp. 429-30).<br />

III.<br />

19 finds a point D within any triangle ABC such that<br />

the triangles DBG, DOA, DAB are all equal ; and<br />

then Heron<br />

passes to the division <strong>of</strong> solid figures.<br />

The solid figures divided in a given ratio (besides the<br />

sphere) are the pyramid with base <strong>of</strong> any form (III. 20),<br />

the cone (III. 21) and the frustum <strong>of</strong> a cone (III. 22), the<br />

cutting planes being parallel to the base in each case. These<br />

problems involve the extraction <strong>of</strong> the cube root <strong>of</strong> a number<br />

which is in general not an exact cube, and the point <strong>of</strong><br />

interest is Heron's method <strong>of</strong> approximating to the cube root<br />

in such a case. Take the case <strong>of</strong> the cone, and suppose that<br />

the portion to be cut <strong>of</strong>f at the top is to the rest <strong>of</strong> the cone as<br />

m to n. We have to find the ratio in which the height or the<br />

edge is cut by the plane parallel to the base which cuts<br />

the cone in the given ratio. The volume <strong>of</strong> a cone being<br />

^irc 2 h, where c is the radius <strong>of</strong> the base and h the height,<br />

we have to find the height <strong>of</strong> the cone the volume <strong>of</strong> which<br />

is .kirc 2 h, and, as the height hf is to the radius c f <strong>of</strong><br />

m + 7b<br />

its base as h is to c, we have simply to find h! where

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!