Read This!The MAA Online book review column
Gnomon: From Pharaohs to Fractals
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The most
familiar form of a gnomon is the L-shaped object of that name (the gnomon
of a square) that serves as the pointer on most sundials. This observation
virtually completes the "Pharaohs" end of the story mentioned in the
title.
Figurate numbers have familiar gnomons. The gnomon of the n-th triangular number, in its familiar rows-of-dots manifestation, is a row of n+1 dots. Other figures have analogous gnomons.
Continued fractions have obvious gnomonic tendencies, especially those with periodic regular representations. These lead naturally into physics, where ladder networks of resistors or capacitors are gnomonic, and their analysis leads back through continued fractions.
Most of us have seen the gnomonic properties relating the golden rectangle, the golden ratio and the Fibonacci numbers. In particular, the golden ratio, called phi in this book, is the limit of the ratios of consecutive Fibonacci numbers. If you construct a rectangle of sides 1 and phi, then the resulting rectangle is gnomonic and its gnomon is a square. Fewer of us know about what Gazalé calls the Silver Pentagon, a pentagon of sides 1, p, p2, p3 and p4, where p is a root of p3 - p - 1 = 0. This pentagon is also gnomonic, and its gnomon is an equilateral triangle.
After these topics, Gazalé spends what seems to be an inordinate amount of time on spirals, especially logarithmic spirals. Bernoulli loved them, too, but the exposition has more rotation matrices than most readers will enjoy.
Finally, we get to the other end of the programme announced in the title, fractals. Gazalé takes a route to fractals that begins with the Kronecker product of matrices. He adapts this to form a Kronecker sum of vectors, and then adapts that to give sequences that can be read as instructions on drawing images of fractals. It is an interesting approach, but again at times he lets the ideas be hidden by the notation.
In sum, this reader found the book generally interesting, though at times over-burdened with notation. There is a considerable variety of topics here, all linked by the unifying concept of gnomonicity.
Publication Data: Gnomon: From Pharaohs to Fractals, by Midhat J. Gazalé. Princeton University Press, 1999, 259 pages, ISBN 0-691-00514-1.
Ed Sandifer (sandifer@wcsu.ctstateu.edu) is professor of mathematics at Western Connecticut State University and has run the Boston Marathon 27 times.
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Read This! is the MAA Online book review column. Contributions are welcome; contact the editor if you'd like to be one of our reviewers. Books for review should be sent to the editor: Fernando Gouvêa, Dept. of Math&CS, Colby College, Waterville, ME 04901. Publishers, please check our reviews information page.
MAA Online is edited by Fernando Q. Gouvêa (fqgouvea@colby.edu). Last modified: Mon Oct 11 21:18:10 -0500 1999