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Apollonian gasket

In mathematics, an Apollonian gasket or Apollonian net is a fractal generated by starting with a triple of circles, each tangent to the other two, and successively filling in more circles, each tangent to another three. It is named after Greek mathematician Apollonius of Perga.[1]

An example of an Apollonian gasket

Construction

 
Mutually tangent circles. Given three mutually tangent circles (black), there are in general two other circles mutually tangent to them (red).

The construction of the Apollonian gasket starts with three circles  ,  , and   (black in the figure), that are each tangent to the other two, but that do not have a single point of triple tangency. These circles may be of different sizes to each other, and it is allowed for two to be inside the third, or for all three to be outside each other. As Apollonius discovered, there exist two more circles   and   (red) that are tangent to all three of the original circles – these are called Apollonian circles. These five circles are separated from each other by six curved triangular regions, each bounded by the arcs from three pairwise-tangent circles. The construction continues by adding six more circles, one in each of these six curved triangles, tangent to its three sides. These in turn create 18 more curved triangles, and the construction continues by again filling these with tangent circles, ad infinitum.

Continued stage by stage in this way, the construction adds   new circles at stage  , giving a total of   circles after   stages. In the limit, this set of circles is an Apollonian gasket. In it, each pair of tangent circles has an infinite Pappus chain of circles tangent to both circles in the pair.

 
In the limiting case (0,0,1,1), the two largest circles are replaced by parallel straight lines. This produces a family of Ford circles.

The size of each new circle is determined by Descartes' theorem, which states that, for any four mutually tangent circles, the radii   of the circles obeys the equation

 
This equation may have a solution with a negative radius; this means that one of the circles (the one with negative radius) surrounds the other three. One or two of the initial circles of this construction, or the circles resulting from this construction, can degenerate to a straight line, which can be thought of as a circle with infinite radius. When there are two lines, they must be parallel, and are considered to be tangent at a point at infinity. When the gasket includes two lines on the  -axis and one unit above it, and a circle of unit diameter tangent to both lines centered on the  -axis, then the circles that are tangent to the  -axis are the Ford circles, important in number theory.

The Apollonian gasket has a Hausdorff dimension of about 1.3057.[2][3] Because it has a well-defined fractional dimension, even though it is not precisely self-similar, it can be thought of as a fractal.

Symmetries

The Möbius transformations of the plane preserve the shapes and tangencies of circles, and therefore preserve the structure of an Apollonian gasket. Any two triples of mutually tangent circles in an Apollonian gasket may be mapped into each other by a Möbius transformation, and any two Apollonian gaskets may be mapped into each other by a Möbius transformation. In particular, for any two tangent circles in any Apollonian gasket, an inversion in a circle centered at the point of tangency (a special case of a Möbius transformation) will transform these two circles into two parallel lines, and transform the rest of the gasket into the special form of a gasket between two parallel lines. Compositions of these inversions can be used to transform any two points of tangency into each other. Möbius transformations are also isometries of the hyperbolic plane, so in hyperbolic geometry all Apollonian gaskets are congruent. In a sense, there is therefore only one Apollonian gasket, up to (hyperbolic) isometry.

The Apollonian gasket is the limit set of a group of Möbius transformations known as a Kleinian group.[4]

For Euclidean symmetry transformations rather than Möbius transformations, in general, the Apollonian gasket will inherit the symmetries of its generating set of three circles. However, some triples of circles can generate Apollonian gaskets with higher symmetry than the initial triple; this happens when the same gasket has a different and more-symmetric set of generating circles. Particularly symmetric cases include the Apollonian gasket between two parallel lines (with infinite dihedral symmetry), the Apollonian gasket generated by three congruent circles in an equilateral triangle (with the symmetry of the triangle), and the Apollonian gasket generated by two circles of radius 1 surrounded by a circle of radius 2 (with two lines of reflective symmetry).

Integral Apollonian circle packings

If any four mutually tangent circles in an Apollonian gasket all have integer curvature (the inverse of their radius) then all circles in the gasket will have integer curvature.[5] Since the equation relating curvatures in an Apollonian gasket, integral or not, is

 
it follows that one may move from one quadruple of curvatures to another by Vieta jumping, just as when finding a new Markov number. The first few of these integral Apollonian gaskets are listed in the following table. The table lists the curvatures of the largest circles in the gasket. Only the first three curvatures (of the five displayed in the table) are needed to completely describe each gasket – all other curvatures can be derived from these three.

Enumerating integral Apollonian circle packings

The curvatures   are a root quadruple (the smallest in some integral circle packing) if  . They are primitive when  . Defining a new set of variables   by the matrix equation

 
gives a system where   satisfies the Descartes equation precisely when  . Furthermore,   is primitive precisely when  , and   is a root quadruple precisely when  .[5]

This relationship can be used to find all the primitive root quadruples with a given negative bend  . It follows from   and   that  , and hence that  . Therefore, any root quadruple will satisfy  . By iterating over all the possible values of  ,  , and   one can find all the primitive root quadruples.[6] The following Python code demonstrates this algorithm, producing the primitive root quadruples listed above.

import math def get_primitive_bends(n): if n == 0: yield 0, 0, 1, 1 return for m in range(math.ceil(n / math.sqrt(3))): s = m**2 + n**2 for d1 in range(max(2 * m, 1), math.floor(math.sqrt(s)) + 1): d2, remainder = divmod(s, d1) if remainder == 0 and math.gcd(n, d1, d2) == 1: yield -n, d1 + n, d2 + n, d1 + d2 + n - 2 * m for n in range(15): for bends in get_primitive_bends(n): print(bends) 

The curvatures appearing in a primitive integral Apollonian circle packing must belong to a set of six or eight possible residues classes modulo 24, and numerical evidence supported that any sufficiently large integer from these residue classes would also be present as a curvature within the packing.[7] This conjecture, known as the local-global conjecture, was proved to be false in 2023.[8][9]

Symmetry of integral Apollonian circle packings

There are multiple types of dihedral symmetry that can occur with a gasket depending on the curvature of the circles.

No symmetry

If none of the curvatures are repeated within the first five, the gasket contains no symmetry, which is represented by symmetry group C1; the gasket described by curvatures (−10, 18, 23, 27) is an example.

D1 symmetry

Whenever two of the largest five circles in the gasket have the same curvature, that gasket will have D1 symmetry, which corresponds to a reflection along a diameter of the bounding circle, with no rotational symmetry.

D2 symmetry

If two different curvatures are repeated within the first five, the gasket will have D2 symmetry; such a symmetry consists of two reflections (perpendicular to each other) along diameters of the bounding circle, with a two-fold rotational symmetry of 180°. The gasket described by curvatures (−1, 2, 2, 3) is the only Apollonian gasket (up to a scaling factor) to possess D2 symmetry.

D3 symmetry

There are no integer gaskets with D3 symmetry.

If the three circles with smallest positive curvature have the same curvature, the gasket will have D3 symmetry, which corresponds to three reflections along diameters of the bounding circle (spaced 120° apart), along with three-fold rotational symmetry of 120°. In this case the ratio of the curvature of the bounding circle to the three inner circles is 23 − 3. As this ratio is not rational, no integral Apollonian circle packings possess this D3 symmetry, although many packings come close.

Almost-D3 symmetry

 
(−15, 32, 32, 33)
 
(−15, 32, 32, 33)

The figure at left is an integral Apollonian gasket that appears to have D3 symmetry. The same figure is displayed at right, with labels indicating the curvatures of the interior circles, illustrating that the gasket actually possesses only the D1 symmetry common to many other integral Apollonian gaskets.

The following table lists more of these almost-D3 integral Apollonian gaskets. The sequence has some interesting properties, and the table lists a factorization of the curvatures, along with the multiplier needed to go from the previous set to the current one. The absolute values of the curvatures of the "a" disks obey the recurrence relation a(n) = 4a(n − 1) − a(n − 2) (sequence A001353 in the OEIS), from which it follows that the multiplier converges to 3 + 2 ≈ 3.732050807.

Integral Apollonian gaskets with near-D3 symmetry
Curvature Factors Multiplier
a b c d a b d a b c d
−1 2 2 3 1×1 1×2 1×3
−4 8 9 9 2×2 2×4 3×3 4.000000000 4.000000000 4.500000000 3.000000000
−15 32 32 33 3×5 4×8 3×11 3.750000000 4.000000000 3.555555556 3.666666667
−56 120 121 121 8×7 8×15 11×11 3.733333333 3.750000000 3.781250000 3.666666667
−209 450 450 451 11×19 15×30 11×41 3.732142857 3.750000000 3.719008264 3.727272727
−780 1680 1681 1681 30×26 30×56 41×41 3.732057416 3.733333333 3.735555556 3.727272727
−2911 6272 6272 6273 41×71 56×112 41×153 3.732051282 3.733333333 3.731112433 3.731707317
−10864 23408 23409 23409 112×97 112×209 153×153 3.732050842 3.732142857 3.732302296 3.731707317
−40545 87362 87362 87363 153×265 209×418 153×571 3.732050810 3.732142857 3.731983425 3.732026144

Sequential curvatures

 
Nested Apollonian gaskets

For any integer n > 0, there exists an Apollonian gasket defined by the following curvatures:
(−nn + 1, n(n + 1), n(n + 1) + 1).
For example, the gaskets defined by (−2, 3, 6, 7), (−3, 4, 12, 13), (−8, 9, 72, 73), and (−9, 10, 90, 91) all follow this pattern. Because every interior circle that is defined by n + 1 can become the bounding circle (defined by −n) in another gasket, these gaskets can be nested. This is demonstrated in the figure at right, which contains these sequential gaskets with n running from 2 through 20.

See also

 
Apollonian sphere packing

Notes

  1. ^ Satija, I. I., The Butterfly in the Iglesias Waseas World: The story of the most fascinating quantum fractal (Bristol: IOP Publishing, 2016), p. 5.
  2. ^ Boyd, David W. (1973), "The residual set dimension of the Apollonian packing", Mathematika, 20 (2): 170–174, doi:10.1112/S0025579300004745, MR 0493763
  3. ^ McMullen, Curtis T. (1998), "Hausdorff dimension and conformal dynamics, III: Computation of dimension" (PDF), American Journal of Mathematics, 120 (4): 691–721, doi:10.1353/ajm.1998.0031, MR 1637951, S2CID 15928775
  4. ^ Counting circles and Ergodic theory of Kleinian groups by Hee Oh Brown. University Dec 2009
  5. ^ a b Ronald L. Graham, Jeffrey C. Lagarias, Colin M. Mallows, Alan R. Wilks, and Catherine H. Yan; "Apollonian Circle Packings: Number Theory" J. Number Theory, 100 (2003), 1-45
  6. ^ Bradford, Alden. "Revisiting Apollonian Gaskets". Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  7. ^ Fuchs, Elena; Sanden, Katherine (2011-11-28). "Some Experiments with Integral Apollonian Circle Packings". Experimental Mathematics. 20 (4): 380–399. arXiv:1001.1406. doi:10.1080/10586458.2011.565255. ISSN 1058-6458.
  8. ^ Summer Haag; Clyde Kertzer; James Rickards; Katherine E. Stange. "The Local-Global Conjecture for Apollonian circle packings is false". arXiv:2307.02749.
  9. ^ Levy, Max G. (August 10, 2023). "Two Students Unravel a Widely Believed Math Conjecture". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved August 14, 2023.

References

  • Benoit B. Mandelbrot: The Fractal Geometry of Nature, W H Freeman, 1982, ISBN 0-7167-1186-9
  • Paul D. Bourke: "". Computers and Graphics, Vol 30, Issue 1, January 2006, pages 134–136.
  • David Mumford, Caroline Series, David Wright: Indra's Pearls: The Vision of Felix Klein, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-521-35253-3
  • Jeffrey C. Lagarias, Colin L. Mallows, Allan R. Wilks: Beyond the Descartes Circle Theorem, The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 109, No. 4 (Apr., 2002), pp. 338–361, (arXiv:math.MG/0101066 v1 9 Jan 2001)

External links

  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Apollonian Gasket". MathWorld.
  • Alexander Bogomolny, Apollonian Gasket, cut-the-knot
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2011-05-02)
  • A Matlab script to plot 2D Apollonian gasket with n identical circles using circle inversion
  • Online experiments with JSXGraph
  • Apollonian Gasket by Michael Screiber, The Wolfram Demonstrations Project.
  • Interactive Apollonian Gasket Demonstration of an Apollonian gasket running on Java
  • Dana Mackenzie. A Tisket, a Tasket, an Apollonian Gasket. American Scientist, January/February 2010.
  • "Sand drawing the world's largest single artwork", The Telegraph, 16 Dec 2009. Newspaper story about an artwork in the form of a partial Apollonian gasket, with an outer circumference of nine miles.
  • Dynamic apollonian gaskets ,Tartapelago by Giorgio Pietrocola, 2014. (in Italian)

apollonian, gasket, mathematics, apollonian, fractal, generated, starting, with, triple, circles, each, tangent, other, successively, filling, more, circles, each, tangent, another, three, named, after, greek, mathematician, apollonius, perga, example, content. In mathematics an Apollonian gasket or Apollonian net is a fractal generated by starting with a triple of circles each tangent to the other two and successively filling in more circles each tangent to another three It is named after Greek mathematician Apollonius of Perga 1 An example of an Apollonian gasket Contents 1 Construction 2 Symmetries 3 Integral Apollonian circle packings 3 1 Enumerating integral Apollonian circle packings 3 2 Symmetry of integral Apollonian circle packings 3 2 1 No symmetry 3 2 2 D1 symmetry 3 2 3 D2 symmetry 3 2 4 D3 symmetry 3 2 5 Almost D3 symmetry 3 3 Sequential curvatures 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksConstruction Edit Mutually tangent circles Given three mutually tangent circles black there are in general two other circles mutually tangent to them red The construction of the Apollonian gasket starts with three circles C 1 displaystyle C 1 C 2 displaystyle C 2 and C 3 displaystyle C 3 black in the figure that are each tangent to the other two but that do not have a single point of triple tangency These circles may be of different sizes to each other and it is allowed for two to be inside the third or for all three to be outside each other As Apollonius discovered there exist two more circles C 4 displaystyle C 4 and C 5 displaystyle C 5 red that are tangent to all three of the original circles these are called Apollonian circles These five circles are separated from each other by six curved triangular regions each bounded by the arcs from three pairwise tangent circles The construction continues by adding six more circles one in each of these six curved triangles tangent to its three sides These in turn create 18 more curved triangles and the construction continues by again filling these with tangent circles ad infinitum Continued stage by stage in this way the construction adds 2 3 n displaystyle 2 cdot 3 n new circles at stage n displaystyle n giving a total of 3 n 1 2 displaystyle 3 n 1 2 circles after n displaystyle n stages In the limit this set of circles is an Apollonian gasket In it each pair of tangent circles has an infinite Pappus chain of circles tangent to both circles in the pair In the limiting case 0 0 1 1 the two largest circles are replaced by parallel straight lines This produces a family of Ford circles The size of each new circle is determined by Descartes theorem which states that for any four mutually tangent circles the radii r i displaystyle r i of the circles obeys the equation 1 r 1 1 r 2 1 r 3 1 r 4 2 2 1 r 1 2 1 r 2 2 1 r 3 2 1 r 4 2 displaystyle left frac 1 r 1 frac 1 r 2 frac 1 r 3 frac 1 r 4 right 2 2 left frac 1 r 1 2 frac 1 r 2 2 frac 1 r 3 2 frac 1 r 4 2 right This equation may have a solution with a negative radius this means that one of the circles the one with negative radius surrounds the other three One or two of the initial circles of this construction or the circles resulting from this construction can degenerate to a straight line which can be thought of as a circle with infinite radius When there are two lines they must be parallel and are considered to be tangent at a point at infinity When the gasket includes two lines on the x displaystyle x axis and one unit above it and a circle of unit diameter tangent to both lines centered on the y displaystyle y axis then the circles that are tangent to the x displaystyle x axis are the Ford circles important in number theory The Apollonian gasket has a Hausdorff dimension of about 1 3057 2 3 Because it has a well defined fractional dimension even though it is not precisely self similar it can be thought of as a fractal Symmetries EditThe Mobius transformations of the plane preserve the shapes and tangencies of circles and therefore preserve the structure of an Apollonian gasket Any two triples of mutually tangent circles in an Apollonian gasket may be mapped into each other by a Mobius transformation and any two Apollonian gaskets may be mapped into each other by a Mobius transformation In particular for any two tangent circles in any Apollonian gasket an inversion in a circle centered at the point of tangency a special case of a Mobius transformation will transform these two circles into two parallel lines and transform the rest of the gasket into the special form of a gasket between two parallel lines Compositions of these inversions can be used to transform any two points of tangency into each other Mobius transformations are also isometries of the hyperbolic plane so in hyperbolic geometry all Apollonian gaskets are congruent In a sense there is therefore only one Apollonian gasket up to hyperbolic isometry The Apollonian gasket is the limit set of a group of Mobius transformations known as a Kleinian group 4 For Euclidean symmetry transformations rather than Mobius transformations in general the Apollonian gasket will inherit the symmetries of its generating set of three circles However some triples of circles can generate Apollonian gaskets with higher symmetry than the initial triple this happens when the same gasket has a different and more symmetric set of generating circles Particularly symmetric cases include the Apollonian gasket between two parallel lines with infinite dihedral symmetry the Apollonian gasket generated by three congruent circles in an equilateral triangle with the symmetry of the triangle and the Apollonian gasket generated by two circles of radius 1 surrounded by a circle of radius 2 with two lines of reflective symmetry Integral Apollonian circle packings Edit Integral Apollonian circle packing defined by circle curvatures of 1 2 2 3 Integral Apollonian circle packing defined by circle curvatures of 3 5 8 8 Integral Apollonian circle packing defined by circle curvatures of 12 25 25 28 Integral Apollonian circle packing defined by circle curvatures of 6 10 15 19 Integral Apollonian circle packing defined by circle curvatures of 10 18 23 27 If any four mutually tangent circles in an Apollonian gasket all have integer curvature the inverse of their radius then all circles in the gasket will have integer curvature 5 Since the equation relating curvatures in an Apollonian gasket integral or not isa 2 b 2 c 2 d 2 2 a b 2 a c 2 a d 2 b c 2 b d 2 c d displaystyle a 2 b 2 c 2 d 2 2ab 2ac 2ad 2bc 2bd 2cd it follows that one may move from one quadruple of curvatures to another by Vieta jumping just as when finding a new Markov number The first few of these integral Apollonian gaskets are listed in the following table The table lists the curvatures of the largest circles in the gasket Only the first three curvatures of the five displayed in the table are needed to completely describe each gasket all other curvatures can be derived from these three Integral Apollonian gaskets Beginning curvatures Symmetry 1 2 2 3 3 D2 2 3 6 7 7 D1 3 4 12 13 13 D1 3 5 8 8 12 D1 4 5 20 21 21 D1 4 8 9 9 17 D1 5 6 30 31 31 D1 5 7 18 18 22 D1 6 7 42 43 43 D1 6 10 15 19 19 D1 6 11 14 15 23 C1 7 8 56 57 57 D1 7 9 32 32 36 D1 7 12 17 20 24 C1 8 9 72 73 73 D1 8 12 25 25 33 D1 8 13 21 24 28 C1 9 10 90 91 91 D1 9 11 50 50 54 D1 9 14 26 27 35 C1 9 18 19 22 34 C1 10 11 110 111 111 D1 10 14 35 39 39 D1 10 18 23 27 35 C1 11 12 132 133 133 D1 11 13 72 72 76 D1 11 16 36 37 45 C1 11 21 24 28 40 C1 12 13 156 157 157 D1 12 16 49 49 57 D1 12 17 41 44 48 C1 12 21 28 37 37 D1 12 21 29 32 44 C1 12 25 25 28 48 D1 13 14 182 183 183 D1 13 15 98 98 102 D1 13 18 47 50 54 C1 13 23 30 38 42 C1 14 15 210 211 211 D1 14 18 63 67 67 D1 14 19 54 55 63 C1 14 22 39 43 51 C1 14 27 31 34 54 C1 15 16 240 241 241 D1 15 17 128 128 132 D1 15 24 40 49 49 D1 15 24 41 44 56 C1 15 28 33 40 52 C1 15 32 32 33 65 D1 Enumerating integral Apollonian circle packings Edit The curvatures a b c d displaystyle a b c d are a root quadruple the smallest in some integral circle packing if a lt 0 b c d displaystyle a lt 0 leq b leq c leq d They are primitive when gcd a b c d 1 displaystyle gcd a b c d 1 Defining a new set of variables x d 1 d 2 m displaystyle x d 1 d 2 m by the matrix equation a b c d 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 2 x d 1 d 2 m displaystyle begin bmatrix a b c d end bmatrix begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 1 amp 0 1 amp 1 amp 1 amp 2 end bmatrix begin bmatrix x d 1 d 2 m end bmatrix gives a system where a b c d displaystyle a b c d satisfies the Descartes equation precisely when x 2 m 2 d 1 d 2 displaystyle x 2 m 2 d 1 d 2 Furthermore a b c d displaystyle a b c d is primitive precisely when gcd x d 1 d 2 1 displaystyle gcd x d 1 d 2 1 and a b c d displaystyle a b c d is a root quadruple precisely when x lt 0 2 m d 1 d 2 displaystyle x lt 0 leq 2m leq d 1 leq d 2 5 This relationship can be used to find all the primitive root quadruples with a given negative bend x displaystyle x It follows from 2 m d 1 displaystyle 2m leq d 1 and 2 m d 2 displaystyle 2m leq d 2 that 4 m 2 d 1 d 2 displaystyle 4m 2 leq d 1 d 2 and hence that 3 m 2 d 1 d 2 m 2 x 2 displaystyle 3m 2 leq d 1 d 2 m 2 x 2 Therefore any root quadruple will satisfy 0 m x 3 displaystyle 0 leq m leq x sqrt 3 By iterating over all the possible values of m displaystyle m d 1 displaystyle d 1 and d 2 displaystyle d 2 one can find all the primitive root quadruples 6 The following Python code demonstrates this algorithm producing the primitive root quadruples listed above import math def get primitive bends n if n 0 yield 0 0 1 1 return for m in range math ceil n math sqrt 3 s m 2 n 2 for d1 in range max 2 m 1 math floor math sqrt s 1 d2 remainder divmod s d1 if remainder 0 and math gcd n d1 d2 1 yield n d1 n d2 n d1 d2 n 2 m for n in range 15 for bends in get primitive bends n print bends The curvatures appearing in a primitive integral Apollonian circle packing must belong to a set of six or eight possible residues classes modulo 24 and numerical evidence supported that any sufficiently large integer from these residue classes would also be present as a curvature within the packing 7 This conjecture known as the local global conjecture was proved to be false in 2023 8 9 Symmetry of integral Apollonian circle packings Edit There are multiple types of dihedral symmetry that can occur with a gasket depending on the curvature of the circles No symmetry Edit If none of the curvatures are repeated within the first five the gasket contains no symmetry which is represented by symmetry group C1 the gasket described by curvatures 10 18 23 27 is an example D1 symmetry Edit Whenever two of the largest five circles in the gasket have the same curvature that gasket will have D1 symmetry which corresponds to a reflection along a diameter of the bounding circle with no rotational symmetry D2 symmetry Edit If two different curvatures are repeated within the first five the gasket will have D2 symmetry such a symmetry consists of two reflections perpendicular to each other along diameters of the bounding circle with a two fold rotational symmetry of 180 The gasket described by curvatures 1 2 2 3 is the only Apollonian gasket up to a scaling factor to possess D2 symmetry D3 symmetry Edit There are no integer gaskets with D3 symmetry If the three circles with smallest positive curvature have the same curvature the gasket will have D3 symmetry which corresponds to three reflections along diameters of the bounding circle spaced 120 apart along with three fold rotational symmetry of 120 In this case the ratio of the curvature of the bounding circle to the three inner circles is 2 3 3 As this ratio is not rational no integral Apollonian circle packings possess this D3 symmetry although many packings come close Almost D3 symmetry Edit 15 32 32 33 15 32 32 33 The figure at left is an integral Apollonian gasket that appears to have D3 symmetry The same figure is displayed at right with labels indicating the curvatures of the interior circles illustrating that the gasket actually possesses only the D1 symmetry common to many other integral Apollonian gaskets The following table lists more of these almost D3 integral Apollonian gaskets The sequence has some interesting properties and the table lists a factorization of the curvatures along with the multiplier needed to go from the previous set to the current one The absolute values of the curvatures of the a disks obey the recurrence relation a n 4a n 1 a n 2 sequence A001353 in the OEIS from which it follows that the multiplier converges to 3 2 3 732050807 Integral Apollonian gaskets with near D3 symmetry Curvature Factors Multipliera b c d a b d a b c d 1 2 2 3 1 1 1 2 1 3 4 8 9 9 2 2 2 4 3 3 4 000000000 4 000000000 4 500000000 3 000000000 15 32 32 33 3 5 4 8 3 11 3 750000000 4 000000000 3 555555556 3 666666667 56 120 121 121 8 7 8 15 11 11 3 733333333 3 750000000 3 781250000 3 666666667 209 450 450 451 11 19 15 30 11 41 3 732142857 3 750000000 3 719008264 3 727272727 780 1680 1681 1681 30 26 30 56 41 41 3 732057416 3 733333333 3 735555556 3 727272727 2911 6272 6272 6273 41 71 56 112 41 153 3 732051282 3 733333333 3 731112433 3 731707317 10864 23408 23409 23409 112 97 112 209 153 153 3 732050842 3 732142857 3 732302296 3 731707317 40545 87362 87362 87363 153 265 209 418 153 571 3 732050810 3 732142857 3 731983425 3 732026144Sequential curvatures Edit Nested Apollonian gasketsFor any integer n gt 0 there exists an Apollonian gasket defined by the following curvatures n n 1 n n 1 n n 1 1 For example the gaskets defined by 2 3 6 7 3 4 12 13 8 9 72 73 and 9 10 90 91 all follow this pattern Because every interior circle that is defined by n 1 can become the bounding circle defined by n in another gasket these gaskets can be nested This is demonstrated in the figure at right which contains these sequential gaskets with n running from 2 through 20 See also Edit Apollonian sphere packingApollonian network a graph derived from finite subsets of the Apollonian gasket Apollonian sphere packing a three dimensional generalization of the Apollonian gasket Sierpinski triangle a self similar fractal with a similar combinatorial structureNotes Edit Satija I I The Butterfly in the Iglesias Waseas World The story of the most fascinating quantum fractal Bristol IOP Publishing 2016 p 5 Boyd David W 1973 The residual set dimension of the Apollonian packing Mathematika 20 2 170 174 doi 10 1112 S0025579300004745 MR 0493763 McMullen Curtis T 1998 Hausdorff dimension and conformal dynamics III Computation of dimension PDF American Journal of Mathematics 120 4 691 721 doi 10 1353 ajm 1998 0031 MR 1637951 S2CID 15928775 Counting circles and Ergodic theory of Kleinian groups by Hee Oh Brown University Dec 2009 a b Ronald L Graham Jeffrey C Lagarias Colin M Mallows Alan R Wilks and Catherine H Yan Apollonian Circle Packings Number Theory J Number Theory 100 2003 1 45 Bradford Alden Revisiting Apollonian Gaskets Retrieved 7 August 2022 Fuchs Elena Sanden Katherine 2011 11 28 Some Experiments with Integral Apollonian Circle Packings Experimental Mathematics 20 4 380 399 arXiv 1001 1406 doi 10 1080 10586458 2011 565255 ISSN 1058 6458 Summer Haag Clyde Kertzer James Rickards Katherine E Stange The Local Global Conjecture for Apollonian circle packings is false arXiv 2307 02749 Levy Max G August 10 2023 Two Students Unravel a Widely Believed Math Conjecture Quanta Magazine Retrieved August 14 2023 References EditBenoit B Mandelbrot The Fractal Geometry of Nature W H Freeman 1982 ISBN 0 7167 1186 9 Paul D Bourke An Introduction to the Apollony Fractal Computers and Graphics Vol 30 Issue 1 January 2006 pages 134 136 David Mumford Caroline Series David Wright Indra s Pearls The Vision of Felix Klein Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 35253 3 Jeffrey C Lagarias Colin L Mallows Allan R Wilks Beyond the Descartes Circle Theorem The American Mathematical Monthly Vol 109 No 4 Apr 2002 pp 338 361 arXiv math MG 0101066 v1 9 Jan 2001 External links Edit The Wikibook Fractals has a page on the topic of Apollonian fractals Weisstein Eric W Apollonian Gasket MathWorld Alexander Bogomolny Apollonian Gasket cut the knot An interactive Apollonian gasket running on pure HTML5 at the Wayback Machine archived 2011 05 02 A Matlab script to plot 2D Apollonian gasket with n identical circles using circle inversion Online experiments with JSXGraph Apollonian Gasket by Michael Screiber The Wolfram Demonstrations Project Interactive Apollonian Gasket Demonstration of an Apollonian gasket running on Java Dana Mackenzie A Tisket a Tasket an Apollonian Gasket American Scientist January February 2010 Sand drawing the world s largest single artwork The Telegraph 16 Dec 2009 Newspaper story about an artwork in the form of a partial Apollonian gasket with an outer circumference of nine miles Dynamic apollonian gaskets Tartapelago by Giorgio Pietrocola 2014 in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apollonian gasket amp oldid 1171035873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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