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7 - The glowing gasket

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2014

David Mumford
Affiliation:
Brown University, Rhode Island
Caroline Series
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
David Wright
Affiliation:
Oklahoma State University
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Summary

Four circles to the kissing come,

The smaller are the benter.

The bend is just the inverse of

The distance from the centre.

Though their intrigue left Euclid dumb

There's now no need for rule of thumb.

Since zero bend's a dead straight line

And concave bends have minus sign,

The sum of the squares of all four bends

Is half the square of their sum.

The Kiss Precise, Sir Frederick Soddy

The lacy web in Figure 7.1 is called the Apollonian gasket. Usually, it is constructed by a simple geometric procedure, dating back to those most famous of geometers, the ancient Greeks. We shall start by explaining the traditional construction, but as we shall disclose shortly, the gasket also represents another remarkable way in which the Schottky dust can congeal. The pictures you see here were actually all drawn using a refinement of the DFS algorithm for tangent Schottky circles.

The starting point of the traditional construction is a chain of three non-overlapping disks, each tangent to both of the others. A region between three tangent disks is a ‘triangle’ with circular arcs for sides. This shape is often called an ideal triangle: the sides are tangent at each of the three vertices so the angle between them is zero degrees. The gasket is activated by the fact that in the middle of each ideal triangle there is always a unique ‘inscribed disk’ or incircle, tangent to the three outer circles.

Type
Chapter
Information
Indra's Pearls
The Vision of Felix Klein
, pp. 196 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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