Constant width | Piecewise-circular curves | Types of triangles

Reuleaux triangle

A Reuleaux triangle [ʁœlo] is a curved triangle with constant width, the simplest and best known curve of constant width other than the circle. It is formed from the intersection of three circular disks, each having its center on the boundary of the other two. Constant width means that the separation of every two parallel supporting lines is the same, independent of their orientation. Because its width is constant, the Reuleaux triangle is one answer to the question "Other than a circle, what shape can a manhole cover be made so that it cannot fall down through the hole?" Reuleaux triangles have also been called spherical triangles, but that term more properly refers to triangles on the curved surface of a sphere.They are named after Franz Reuleaux, a 19th-century German engineer who pioneered the study of machines for translating one type of motion into another, and who used Reuleaux triangles in his designs. However, these shapes were known before his time, for instance by the designers of Gothic church windows, by Leonardo da Vinci, who used it for a map projection, and by Leonhard Euler in his study of constant-width shapes. Other applications of the Reuleaux triangle include giving the shape to guitar picks, fire hydrant nuts, pencils, and drill bits for drilling filleted square holes, as well as in graphic design in the shapes of some signs and corporate logos. Among constant-width shapes with a given width, the Reuleaux triangle has the minimum area and the sharpest (smallest) possible angle (120°) at its corners. By several numerical measures it is the farthest from being centrally symmetric. It provides the largest constant-width shape avoiding the points of an integer lattice, and is closely related to the shape of the quadrilateral maximizing the ratio of perimeter to diameter. It can perform a complete rotation within a square while at all times touching all four sides of the square, and has the smallest possible area of shapes with this property. However, although it covers most of the square in this rotation process, it fails to cover a small fraction of the square's area, near its corners. Because of this property of rotating within a square, the Reuleaux triangle is also sometimes known as the Reuleaux rotor. The Reuleaux triangle is the first of a sequence of Reuleaux polygons whose boundaries are curves of constant width formed from regular polygons with an odd number of sides. Some of these curves have been used as the shapes of coins. The Reuleaux triangle can also be generalized into three dimensions in multiple ways: the Reuleaux tetrahedron (the intersection of four balls whose centers lie on a regular tetrahedron) does not have constant width, but can be modified by rounding its edges to form the Meissner tetrahedron, which does. Alternatively, the surface of revolution of the Reuleaux triangle also has constant width. (Wikipedia).

Reuleaux triangle
Video thumbnail

Reuleaux Triangles - GCSE Higher extension

Proving the area and perimeter of a Reuleaux triangle. Mathologer video on shapes of constant width (really awesome!) - https://youtu.be/-eQaF6OmWKw

From playlist Geometry Revision

Video thumbnail

Billiard in a Reuleaux triangle

Seeing the billiard in a Reuleaux triangle was a wish by several viewers (including, I believe, Carmen, Bogdan, Auferen, Bluelightzero and Jonathan), so here it finally is! The Reuleaux triangle is a shape of constant width. You can build it by starting from an equilateral triangle, and t

From playlist Particles in billiards

Video thumbnail

Label the parts of a triangle ex 1

👉 Learn how to find the missing side of a triangle. A triangle is a polygon with three sides. Triangles are classified on the basis of the angles or on the basis of the sides. The classification of a triangle on the basis of the sides are: scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles. A

From playlist Triangles

Video thumbnail

How do you find all of the sides for a equilateral triangle

👉 Learn how to find the missing side of a triangle. A triangle is a polygon with three sides. Triangles are classified on the basis of the angles or on the basis of the sides. The classification of a triangle on the basis of the sides are: scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles. A

From playlist Triangles

Video thumbnail

Trigonometry 4 The Area of a Triangle

Various ways of using trigonometry to determine the area of a triangle.

From playlist Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

New Reuleaux Triangle Magic

NEW (Christmas 2019). Two ways to support Mathologer Mathologer Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mathologer Mathologer PayPal: paypal.me/mathologer (see the Patreon page for details) Today's video is about plane shapes that, just like circles, have the same width in all possible directi

From playlist Recent videos

Video thumbnail

Why are manhole covers round? - Marc Chamberland

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-are-manhole-covers-round-marc-chamberland Why are most manhole covers round? Sure it makes them easy to roll, and slide into place in any alignment. But there’s another, more compelling reason, involving a peculiar geometric property of circ

From playlist New TED-Ed Originals

Video thumbnail

Weird Triangle Wheels Roll Like Circles

In this video I show you a triangle wheel called a Reuleaux triangle. Triangle Wheel Bike Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeOS9pG6vjU Watch other popular videos from my channel Superhydrophobic Knife Slices Water Drops in Half https://youtu.be/Ls_ISb7lG-I Real-Life Invisibility

From playlist Amazing 3D Printed Objects

Video thumbnail

Shapes and Solids of Constant Width - Numberphile

Get them at Maths Gear: http://bit.ly/mathsgear More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Steve Mould discusses shapes and solids of constant width, including the Reuleaux triangle and the UK's 50p coin. Brown papers: http://bit.ly/brownpapers NUMBERPHILE Website: http://www.numb

From playlist Festival of Spoken Nerd on Numberphile

Video thumbnail

Round Triangles!

Why circles are round (and triangles too!) rotor in a square hole: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUeQugasOkk more info on reuleaux rotors and other SWEET stuff: http://www.howround.com minutephysics is now on Google+ - http://bit.ly/qzEwc6 And facebook - http://facebook.com/minut

From playlist MinutePhysics

Video thumbnail

Phase space representation of the billiard in Reuleaux-like pentagons

The billiard in this simulation is obtained by replacing the sides of a regular pentagon by circular arcs. The radius of the arcs varies between the 1 and 10, when measured in terms of the circumradius of the initial pentagon. A genuine "Reuleaux pentagon", similar to the Reuleaux triangle

From playlist Particles in billiards

Video thumbnail

Using the Isosceles triangle theorem to find the measure of x

👉 Learn how to find the missing side of a triangle. A triangle is a polygon with three sides. Triangles are classified on the basis of the angles or on the basis of the sides. The classification of a triangle on the basis of the sides are: scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles. A

From playlist Triangles

Video thumbnail

What are the properties that make up a rhombus

👉 Learn how to solve problems with rhombuses. A rhombus is a parallelogram such that all the sides are equal. Some of the properties of rhombuses are: all the sides are equal, each pair of opposite sides are parallel, each pair of opposite angles are equal, the diagonals bisect each other,

From playlist Properties of Rhombuses

Video thumbnail

How to determine the measure of an isosceles triangle ex 11

👉 Learn how to find the missing side of a triangle. A triangle is a polygon with three sides. Triangles are classified on the basis of the angles or on the basis of the sides. The classification of a triangle on the basis of the sides are: scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles. A

From playlist Triangles

Video thumbnail

When do interacting organisms gravitate to the vertices of a regular simplex? - Robert McCann

Analysis Seminar Topic: When do interacting organisms gravitate to the vertices of a regular simplex? Speaker: Robert McCann Affiliation: University of Toronto Date: February 03, 2020 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

How to find the measure of each side of an equilateral triangle

👉 Learn how to find the missing side of a triangle. A triangle is a polygon with three sides. Triangles are classified on the basis of the angles or on the basis of the sides. The classification of a triangle on the basis of the sides are: scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles. A

From playlist Triangles

Video thumbnail

Phase space representation of the billiard in Reuleaux-like heptagons

The billiard in this simulation is obtained by replacing the sides of a regular heptagon by circular arcs. The radius of the arcs varies between the 1 and 50, when measured in terms of the circumradius of the initial heptagon. A genuine "Reuleaux heptagon", similar to the Reuleaux triangle

From playlist Particles in billiards

Related pages

Hexagon | Perimeter | Estermann measure | Rotation around a fixed axis | Neural network | Supporting line | Venn diagram | Borromean rings | Convex hull | Ellipse | Reuleaux polygon | Barbier's theorem | Arbelos | Cross section (geometry) | Conformal map | Rolling | Surface of constant width | Bézier triangle | Curve of constant width | Surface of revolution | Semicircle | Vertex (geometry) | Curve | Kovner–Besicovitch measure | Equilateral triangle | Quadrilateral | Tetrahedron | Circumscribed circle | Coinage shapes | Soap bubble | Reuleaux tetrahedron | Simple polygon | Square | Ball (mathematics) | Equidiagonal quadrilateral | Packing density | Heptagon | Sphere | Schwarz triangle | Vesica piscis | Triquetra | Diameter | Kite (geometry) | Integer lattice | Midpoint | Circular triangle | Deltoid curve | Euclidean distance | Blaschke–Lebesgue theorem | Double lattice | Leonhard Euler | Fourier transform | Plateau's laws | Circle | Disk (mathematics) | Inscribed square problem | Regular polygon | Mohr–Mascheroni theorem