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The use of mathematics to read the book of nature. About Kepler and snowflakes

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2010
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“Philosophy is written in that great book which ever lies before our eyes – I mean the universe – but we cannot understand it if we do not first learn the language and grasp the symbols, in which it is written. This book is written in the mathematical language, and the symbols are triangles, circles and other geometric figures, without whose help it is impossible to comprehend a single word of it; without which one wanders in vain through a dark labyrinth,” wrote Galileo (Il Saggiatore, chapter 6, p. 4). In 1611, the mathematician Johannes Kepler,a contemporary of Galileo and voracious reader of the book of the world, wrote his shortest and most surprising book, The Six-Cornered Snowflake: A New Year’s Gift. “Even as I write these things, it has begun to snow again, and more thickly than before. I have been attentively observing the tiny particles of snow, and although they were all falling with pointed radii, they were of two kinds. Some were exceedingly small, with varying numbers of radii that spread in every direction and were plain, without tufts or striations. These were most delicate, but at the same time joined together at the center in a somewhat larger droplet; and they were the majority. Sprinkled among them were the rarer, six-cornered snowflakes” (Kepler, 1611). This text by Kepler, little known outside the physics and mathematics community, marked a milestone in the use of mathematics to understand a part of the physical world that surrounds us. With this text as a map, this article covers part of the terrain explored by geometry, from the 3rd century AD until today.
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Archimedes (c250 BCE) The Sand Reckoner. In: TL Heath (ed) The Works of Archimedes. Cambridge University Press 221–232. Available online at [http://www.ar-chive.org/stream/worksofarchimede029517mbp#page/n3/mode/2up] Hales TC (2005) A Proof of the Kepler Conjecture. Ann Math 162:1065-1185 Herodotus (440 BCE) The History of Heterodotus. Translated by George Rawlinson. Available online at [http://classics.mit.edu/Herodotus/history.html] Kepler J (2010) The Six-Cornered Snowflake. A New Year’s Gift (Kepler, 1610). Bilingual edition Latin/English,Paul Dry Books, Philadelphia Lucretius (c 50 BCE) De Rerum Natura. Available online at [http://classics.mit.edu/Carus/nature_things.html] MacLaurin C (1743) Of the bases of the cells wherein the bees deposit their honey. Transactions of the Royal Society of London Pappus (1981) Mathematical Collection. In: Heath TL (ed)A History of Greek Mathemathics, vol. 2. Dover Publications,London Toth LF (1964) What the bees know and what they do not know. Bull Amer Math Soc 70, 4:468-481. Also available online at [http://projecteuclid.org] Weaire D, Phelan R (1994) A counter-example to Kelvin’s conjecture on minimal surfaces. Philosophical Magazine Letters 69, 2:107-110
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