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Ladders, Couches, and Envelopes

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Title: Ladders, Couches, and Envelopes


1
Ladders, Couches, and Envelopes
  • An old technique gives a new approach to an old
    problemDan Kalman
  • American UniversityFall 2007

2
The Ladder Problem
  • How long a ladder can you carry around a
    corner?

3
The Traditional Approach
  • Reverse the question
  • Instead of the longest ladder that will go around
    the corner
  • Find the shortest ladder that will not

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A Direct Approach
  • Why is this reversal necessary?
  • Look for a direct approach find the longest
    ladder that fits
  • Conservative approach slide the ladder along the
    walls as far as possible
  • Lets look at a mathwright simulation

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About the Boundary Curve
  • Called the envelope of the family of lines
  • Nice calculus technique to find its equation
  • Technique used to be standard topic
  • Well known curve (astroid, etc.)
  • Gives an immediate solution to the ladder problem

11
Solution to Ladder Problem
  • Ladder will fit if (a,b) is outside the region W
  • Ladder will not fit if (a,b) is inside the region
  • Longest L occurs when (a,b) is on the curve

12
A famous curve
  • Hypocycloid point on a circle rolling within a
    larger circle
  • Astroid larger radius four times larger than
    smaller radius

Animated graphic from Mathworld.com
13
Trammel of Archimedes
14
Alternate View
  • Ellipse Model slide a line with its ends on the
    axes, let a fixed point on the line trace a curve
  • The length of the line is the sum of the semi
    major and minor axes

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  • x a cos q
  • y b sin q

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Family of Ellipses
  • Paint an ellipse with every point of the ladder
  • Family of ellipses with sum of major and minor
    axes equal to length L of ladder
  • These ellipses sweep out the same region as the
    moving line
  • Same envelope

22
Animated graphic from Mathworld.com
23
Finding the Envelope
  • Family of curves given by F(x,y,a) 0
  • For each a the equation defines a curve
  • Take the partial derivative with respect to a
  • Use the equations of F and Fa to eliminate the
    parameter a
  • Resulting equation in x and y is the envelope

24
Parameterize Lines
  • L is the length of ladder
  • Parameter is angle a
  • Note x and y intercepts

25
Find Envelope
26
Find Envelope
27
Another sample family of curves and its envelope
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Find parametric equations for the envelope
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Plot those parametric equations
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Double Parameterization
  • Parameterize line for each a x(t) L
    cos(a)(1-t) y(t) L sin(a) t
  • This defines mapping R2 ? R2 F(a,t) (L
    cos(a)(1-t), L sin(a) t)
  • Fixed a ? line in family of lines
  • Fixed t ? ellipse in family of
    ellipses
  • Envelope points are on boundary of image
    Jacobian F 0

35
Mapping R2 ? R2
  • Jacobian F vanishes when t sin2a
  • Envelope curve parameterized by( x , y ) F (a
    , sin2a) ( L cos3a, L sin3a)

36
History of Envelopes
  • In 1940s and 1950s, some authors claimed
    envelopes were standard topic in calculus
  • Nice treatment in Courants 1949 Calculus text
  • Some later appearances in advanced calculus and
    theory of equations books
  • No instance in current calculus books I checked
  • Not included in Thomas (1st ed.)
  • Still mentioned in context of differential eqns
  • What happened to envelopes?

37
Another Approach
  • Already saw two approaches
  • Intersection Approach intersect the curves for
    parameter values a and a h
  • Take limit as h goes to 0
  • Envelope is locus of intersections of neighboring
    curves
  • Neat idea, but

38
Example No intersections
  • Start with given ellipse
  • At each point construct the osculating circle
    (radius radius of curvature)
  • Original ellipse is the envelope of this family
    of circles
  • Neighboring ellipses are disjoint!

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More PicturesFamily of Osculating Circlesfor
an Ellipse
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Variations on the Ladder Problem
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Longest ladder has an envelope curve that is on
or below both points.
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Longest ladder has an envelope curve that is
tangent to curve C.
50
The Couch Problem
  • Real ladders not one dimensional
  • Couches and desks
  • Generalize to move a rectangle around the corner

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Couch Problem Results
  • Lower edge of couch follows same path as the
    ladder
  • Upper edge traces a parallel curve C (Not a
    translate)
  • At maximum, corner point is on C
  • Theorem Envelope of parallels of curves is the
    parallel of the envelope of the curves
  • Theorem At max length, circle centered at corner
    point is tangent to original envelope E (the
    astroid)

57
Good News / Bad News
  • Cannot solve couch problem symbolically
  • Requires solving a 6th degree polynomial
  • It is possible to parameterize an infinite set of
    problems (corner location, width) with exact
    rational solutions
  • Example Point (7, 3.5) Width 1. Maximum length
    is 12.5

58
More
  • Math behind envelope algorithm is interesting
  • Different formulations of envelope boundary
    curve? Tangent to every curve in family?
    Neighboring curve intersections?
  • Ladder problem is related to Lagrange Multipliers
    and Duality
  • See my paper on the subject
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