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Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

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Page 1: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Hikorski Triples

By Jonny GriffithsUEA, May 2010

Page 2: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

The mathematician's patterns, like the painter's or the poet's

must be beautiful; the ideas, like the colors or the words

must fit together in a harmonious way. Beauty is the first test:

there is no permanent place in this world for ugly mathematics.

G. H. Hardy (1877 - 1947), A Mathematician's Apology

Page 3: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Mathematics

Page 4: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

What does

mean to you?

Page 5: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

GCSE Resit Worksheet, 2002

How many different equations can you make by putting the numbers into the circles?

Solve them!

Page 6: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Suppose a, b, c, and d are in the bag.

If ax + b = cx + d, then the solution to this equation is x =  

There are 24 possible equations, but they occur in pairs, for example:

 ax + b = cx + d and cx + d = ax + b

will have the same solution.

 So there are a maximum of twelve distinct solutions.

Page 7: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

This maximum is possible: for example, if 7, -2, 3 and 4 are in the bag,

then the solutions are:

Page 8: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

If x is a solution, then –x, 1/x and -1/x will also be solutions.

ax + b = cx + d

a + b(1/x) = c + d(1/x)

c(-x) + b = a(-x) + d

a + d(-1/x) = c + b(-1/x)

Page 9: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

The solutions in general will be:

{p, -p, 1/p, -1/p}{q, -q, 1/q, -1/q}

and {r, -r, 1/r, -1/r}

where p, q and r are all ≥ 1

Page 10: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

It is possible for p, q and r to be positive integers.

For example, 1, 2, 3 and 8 in the bag give (p, q, r) = (7, 5, 3).

In this case, they form a Hikorski Triple.

Page 11: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Are (7, 5, 3) linked in any way?

Will this always work?

Page 12: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010
Page 13: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

a, b, c, d in the bag gives the same as

b, c, d, a in the bag, gives the same as …

Permutation Law

Page 14: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

a, b, c, d in the bag gives the same as

a + k, b + k, c + k, d + kin the bag.

Translation Law

Page 15: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

a, b, c, d in the bag gives the same as

ka, kb, kc, kdin the bag.

Dilation Law

Page 16: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

So we can start with 0, 1, a and b (a, b rational numbers

with 0 < 1 < a < b)in the bag without loss of

generality.

Page 17: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

a, b, c, d in the bag gives the same as

-a, -b, -c, -din the bag.

Reflection Law

Page 18: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Suppose we have 0, 1, a, bin the bag, with 0 < 1 < a < b

and with b – a < 1

then this gives the same as –b, -a, -1, 0

which gives the same as 0, b - a, b - 1, b

which gives the same as 0, 1, (b -1)/(b - a), b/(b - a)

Now b/(b - a) - (b -1)/(b - a) = 1/(b - a) > 1

Page 19: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

If the four numbers in the bag are given as {0, 1, a, b}

with 1< a < b and b – a > 1, then we can say the bag is in Standard Form.

 So our four-numbers-in-a-bag situation

obeys four laws:

the Permutation Law, the Translation Law, the Reflection Law and the Dilation Law.

Page 20: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Given a bag of numbers in Standard Form,

where might the whole numbers for our HT come from?

Page 21: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

The only possible whole numbers here are:

Page 22: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

(b-1)/a must be the smallest here.

Page 23: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010
Page 24: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010
Page 25: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Pythagorean Triples(√(x2+y2), x, y)

Hikorski Triples(p, q, (pq+1)/(p+q))

Page 26: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

How many HTs are there?

Plenty...

Page 27: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Is abc unique?

Page 28: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Twelve solutions to bag problem are:

Page 29: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

What do

mean to you?

Page 30: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010
Page 31: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Adding Speeds Relativistically

Suppose we say the speed of light is 1.

How do we add two speeds?

Page 32: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010
Page 33: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Try the recurrence relation:x, y, (xy+1)/(x+y)…

Not much to report...

Try the recurrence relation:x, y, (x+y)/(xy+1)…

still nothing to report...

Page 34: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

But try the recurrence relation:x, y, -(xy+1)/(x+y)…

Periodic, period 3

Page 35: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Now try the recurrence relation:x, y, -(x+y)/(xy+1)…

Also periodic, period 3

Are both periodic, period 6

Page 36: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Parametrisation for Pythagorean Triples:

(r(p2+q2), 2rpq, r(p2-q2))

For Hikorski Triples?

Page 37: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

The Cross-ratio

Page 38: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

If a, b, c and d are complex,

when is the cross-ratio real?

Page 39: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Takes six values as A, B and C permute:

Form a group isomorphic to S3 under composition

Page 40: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

 So the cross-ratio

and these cross-ratio-type functionsall obey the four laws:

the Permutation Law, the Translation Law, the Reflection Law and the Dilation Law.

Page 41: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Elliptic Curve Connection

Rewrite this as Y2 = X(X -1)(X - D)

Transformation to be used is:

Y = ky, X = (x-a)/(b-a), or...

D runs through the values

Page 42: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

So we have six isomorphic elliptic curves.

The j-invariant for each will be the same.

Page 43: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

is an elliptic curve

Page 44: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

has integral points (5,3), (3,-2), (-2,5)

If the uniqueness conjecture is true...

and (30,1), (1,-1), (-1,30)

and (1,30), (30,-1), (-1,1)

Page 45: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

x y

Find a in terms of x and e in terms of y and then substitute...

Cross-ratio-type functions and Lyness Cycles

Page 46: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

What if we try the same trick here?

)(

)(

dc

ba

)(

)(

ed

cb

)(

)(

ae

dc

)(

)(

ba

ed

x

y

z

?

Page 47: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

And here?

)(

)(

bc

ba

)(

)(

cd

cb

)(

)(

da

dc

x

y

?

So this works with the other cross-ratio type functions too...

Page 48: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

Why the name?

Page 49: Hikorski Triples By Jonny Griffiths UEA, May 2010

www.jonny-griffiths.net