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Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 1.
8.286 Lecture 11
October 17, 2013
NON-EUCLIDEAN SPACES:
CLOSED UNIVERSES
REVIEW OF LECTURE 10:
INTRODUCTION TO
NON-EUCLIDEAN SPACES
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Corrected 10/10/13
–3–Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 2.
Corrected 10/10/13–4–
Equivalent Statements of the 5th Postulate
(a) “If a straight line intersects one of two parallels (i.e, lines which do notintersect however far they are extended), it will intersect the other also.”
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –5–
Equivalent Statements of the 5th Postulate
(b) “There is one and only one line that passes through any given point and isparallel to a given line.”
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –6–
Equivalent Statements of the 5th Postulate
(c) “Given any figure there exists a figure, similar to it, of any size.”(Two polygons are similar if their corresponding angles are equal, and theircorresponding sides are proportional.)
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –7–
Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 3.
Equivalent Statements of the 5th Postulate
(d) “There is a triangle in which the sum of the three angles is equal to tworight angles (i.e., 180◦).”
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –8–
Giovanni Geralamo Saccheri (1667{1733)
In 1733, Saccheri, a Jesuit priest,published Euclides ab omni naevovindicatus (Euclid Freed of EveryFlaw).
The book was a study of what ge-ometry would be like if the 5thpostulate were false.
He hoped to find an inconsistency, butfailed.
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –9–
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777{1855)
German mathematician and physicist.
Born as the son of a poor working-classparents. His mother was illiterate andnever even recorded the date of his birth.
His students included Richard Dedekind,Bernhard Riemann, Peter Gustav Leje-une Dirichlet, Gustav Kirchhoff, andAugust Ferinand Mobius.
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –10– –11–
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Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 4.
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Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 5.
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Non-Euclidean Geometry:
The Surface of a Sphere
x2 + y2 + z2 = R2 .
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –17–
Polar Coordinates:
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –18–
Varying θ:Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –19–
Slides courtesy of Mustafa Amin. Used with permission.
Alan Guth, Non-Euclidean Spaces: Closed Universes 8.286 Lecture 11, October 17, 2013, p. 6.
Varying φ:
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –20–
A Sphere in 4 Euclidean Dimensions
Alan Guth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8.286 Lecture 11, October 17 –21–
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8.286 The Early UniverseFall 2013
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