Golden rectangle
In geometry, a golden rectangle is a rectangle with side lengths in golden ratio or with approximately equal to or
Golden rectangles exhibit a special form of self-similarity: if a square is added to the long side, or removed from the short side, the result is a golden rectangle as well.
Construction
Owing to the Pythagorean theorem, the diagonal dividing one half of a square equals the radius of a circle whose outermost point is the corner of a golden rectangle added to the square. Thus, a golden rectangle can be constructed with only a straightedge and compass in four steps:- Draw a square
- Draw a line from the midpoint of one side of the square to an opposite corner
- Use that line as the radius to draw an arc that defines the height of the rectangle
- Complete the golden rectangle
Golden whirl
Divide a square into four congruent right triangles with legs in ratio and arrange these in the shape of a golden rectangle, enclosing a similar rectangle that is scaled by factor and rotated about the centre by Repeating the construction at successively smaller scales results in four infinite sequences of adjoining right triangles, tracing a whirl of converging golden rectangles.The logarithmic spiral through the vertices of adjacent triangles has polar slope The parallelogram between the pair of upright grey triangles has perpendicular diagonals in ratio, hence is a golden rhombus.
If the triangle has legs of lengths and then each discrete spiral has length The areas of the triangles in each spiral region sum to the perimeters are equal to and .
History
The proportions of the golden rectangle have been observed as early as the Babylonian Tablet of Shamash, though Mario Livio calls any knowledge of the golden ratio before the Ancient Greeks "doubtful".According to Livio, since the publication of Luca Pacioli's Divina proportione in 1509, "the Golden Ratio started to become available to artists in theoretical treatises that were not overly mathematical, that they could actually use."
The 1927 Villa Stein designed by Le Corbusier, some of whose architecture utilizes the golden ratio, features dimensions that closely approximate golden rectangles.
Relation to regular polygons and polyhedra
gives an alternative construction of the golden rectangle using three polygons circumscribed by congruent circles: a regular decagon, hexagon, and pentagon. The respective lengths a, b, and c of the sides of these three polygons satisfy the equation a2 + b2 = c2, so line segments with these lengths form a right triangle. The ratio of the side length of the hexagon to the decagon is the golden ratio, so this triangle forms half of a golden rectangle.The convex hull of two opposite edges of a regular icosahedron forms a golden rectangle. The twelve vertices of the icosahedron can be decomposed in this way into three mutually-perpendicular golden rectangles, whose boundaries are linked in the pattern of the Borromean rings.
Relation to angles of the golden triangle
Assume a golden rectangle has been constructed as indicated above, with height, length and diagonal length. The triangles on the diagonal have altitudes each perpendicular foot divides the diagonal in ratioIf a horizontal line is drawn through the intersection point of the diagonal and the internal edge of the square, the original golden rectangle and the two scaled copies along the diagonal have linear sizes in the ratios the square and rectangle opposite the diagonal both have areas equal to
Relative to vertex, the coordinates of feet of altitudes and are and ; the length of line segment is equal to altitude
If the diagram is further subdivided by perpendicular lines through and, the lengths of the diagonal and its subsections can be expressed as trigonometric functions of arguments 72 and 36 degrees, the angles of the golden triangle:
Both the lengths of the diagonal sections and the trigonometric values are elements of quartic number field
The golden rhombus with edge has diagonal lengths equal to and The regular pentagon with side length has area Its five diagonals divide the pentagon into golden triangles and gnomons, and an upturned, scaled copy at the centre. Since the regular pentagon is defined by its side length and the angles of the golden triangle, it follows that all measures can be expressed in powers of and the diagonal segments of the golden rectangle, as illustrated above.
Interpreting the diagonal sections as musical string lengths results in a set of ten corresponding pitches, one of which doubles at the octave. Mapping the intervals in logarithmic scale — with the "golden octave" equal to — shows equally tempered semitones, minor thirds and one major second in the span of an eleventh. An analysis in musical terms is substantiated by the single exceptional pitch proportional to, that approximates the harmonic seventh within remarkable one cent accuracy.
This set of ten tones can be partitioned into two modes of the pentatonic scale: the palindromic "Egyptian" mode and the stately "blues minor" mode.