<<http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040403/mathtrek.asp>>

Riding on Square Wheels 
Ivars Peterson

A square wheel may be the ultimate flat tire. There's no way it can roll
over a flat, smooth road without a sequence of jarring bumps. 

Stan Wagon, a mathematician at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn., has
a bicycle with square wheels. It's a weird contraption, but he can ride
it perfectly smoothly. His secret is the shape of the road over which the
wheels roll. 



 
Stan Wagon rides his square-wheeled trike over a special roadway.
Courtesy of Stan Wagon
 



A square wheel can roll smoothly, keeping the axle moving in a straight
line and at a constant velocity, if it travels over evenly spaced bumps
of just the right shape. This special shape is called an inverted
catenary. 



 
A hanging chain.

 



A catenary is the curve describing a rope or chain hanging loosely
between two supports. At first glance, it looks like a parabola. In fact,
it corresponds to the graph of a function called the hyperbolic cosine.
Turning the curve upside down gives you an inverted catenary�just like
each bump of Wagon's road. 

The Exploratorium in San Francisco exhibits a model of such a roadbed and
a pair of square wheels joined by an axle to travel over it (see
http://www.exploratorium.edu/xref/exhibits/square_wheel.html). 



 
A square rolling on a bed of inverted catenaries.

 



When Wagon first saw the Exploratorium model a number of years ago, he
was intrigued. The exhibit inspired him to investigate the relationship
between the shapes of wheels and the roads over which they roll smoothly.


These studies also led Wagon to build a full-size bicycle with square
wheels. "As soon as I learned it could be done, I had to do it," Wagon
says. 

The resulting bicycle (actually a trike) went on display at the
Macalester science center, where it could be seen and ridden by the
public. Now, the science center has a new, improved square-wheeled trike.
"The old one was falling apart," Wagon says. "The new one's ride is much,
much smoother." 



 
A view of the rear of Wagon's new square-wheeled trike.
Courtesy of Stan Wagon
 



Steering remains difficult, however. If you turn the square wheels too
much, they get out of sync with the inverted catenaries. 

It turns out that for just about every shape of wheel there's an
appropriate road to produce a smooth ride, and vice versa. 

Just as a square rides smoothly across a roadbed of linked inverted
catenaries, other regular polygons, including pentagons and hexagons,
also ride smoothly over curves made up of appropriately selected pieces
of inverted catenaries. As the number of a polygon's sides increases,
these catenary segments get shorter and flatter. Ultimately, for an
infinite number of sides (in effect, a circle), the curve becomes a
straight, horizontal line. 

Interestingly, triangular wheels don't work. As an equilateral triangle
rolls over one catenary, it ends up bumping into the next catenary 

However, you can find roads for wheels shaped like ellipses, cardioids,
rosettes, teardrops, and many other geometric forms. 

You can also start with a road profile and find the shape that rolls
smoothly across it. A sawtooth road, for instance, requires a wheel
pasted together from pieces of an equiangular spiral. 



 
Equiangular spiral on a sawtooth road.

 



There's certainly more than one way to ride a bike! 

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to