mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Blog

The end of coins of constant width

 2017-03-27 
Tomorrow, the new 12-sided one pound coin is released.
Although I'm excited about meeting this new coin, I am also a little sad, as its release ends the era in which all British coins are shapes of constant width.

Shapes of constant width

A shape of constant width is a shape that is the same width in every direction, so these shapes can roll without changing height. The most obvious such shape is a circle. But there are others, including the shape of the seven-sided 50p coin.
As shown below, each side of a 50p is part of a circle centred around the opposite corner. As a 50p rolls, its height is always the distance between one of the corners and the side opposite, or in other words the radius of this circle. As these circles are all the same size, the 50p is a shape of constant width.
Shapes of constant width can be created from any regular polygon with an odd number of sides, by replacing the sides by parts of circles centred at the opposite corner. The first few are shown below.
It's also possible to create shapes of constant width from irregular polygons with an odd number, but it's not possible to create them from polygons with an even number of sides. Therefore, the new 12-sided pound coin will be the first non-constant width British coin since the (also 12-sided) threepenny bit was phased out in 1971.
Back in 2014, I wrote to my MP in an attempt to find out why the new coin was not of a constant width. He forwarded my letter to the Treasury, but I never heard back from them.

Pizza cutting

When cutting a pizza into equal shaped pieces, the usual approach is to cut along a few diameters to make triangles. There are other ways to fairly share pizza, including the following (that has appeared here before as an answer to this puzzle):
The slices in this solution are closely related to a triangle of constant width. Solutions can be made using other shapes of constant width, including the following, made using a constant width pentagon and heptagon (50p):
There are many more ways to cut a pizza into equal pieces. You can find them in Infinite families of monohedral disk tilings by Joel Haddley and Stephen Worsley [1].
You can't use the shape of a new pound coin to cut a pizza though.
Edit: Speaking of new £1 coins, I made this stupid video with Adam "Frownsend" Townsend about them earlier today:

Infinite families of monohedral disk tilings by Joel Haddley and Stephen Worsley. December 2015. [link]
                        
(Click on one of these icons to react to this blog post)

You might also enjoy...

Comments

Comments in green were written by me. Comments in blue were not written by me.
 Add a Comment 


I will only use your email address to reply to your comment (if a reply is needed).

Allowed HTML tags: <br> <a> <small> <b> <i> <s> <sup> <sub> <u> <spoiler> <ul> <ol> <li> <logo>
To prove you are not a spam bot, please type "nogaced" backwards in the box below (case sensitive):

Archive

Show me a random blog post
 2024 

Feb 2024

Zines, pt. 2

Jan 2024

Christmas (2023) is over
 2023 
▼ show ▼
 2022 
▼ show ▼
 2021 
▼ show ▼
 2020 
▼ show ▼
 2019 
▼ show ▼
 2018 
▼ show ▼
 2017 
▼ show ▼
 2016 
▼ show ▼
 2015 
▼ show ▼
 2014 
▼ show ▼
 2013 
▼ show ▼
 2012 
▼ show ▼

Tags

folding tube maps big internet math-off coins rhombicuboctahedron determinants arithmetic pi ternary royal institution bodmas propositional calculus matt parker polynomials christmas numbers books captain scarlet palindromes pi approximation day gather town gaussian elimination london underground crossnumber graph theory light trigonometry reuleaux polygons matrix multiplication game of life hannah fry fence posts noughts and crosses curvature flexagons craft fonts gerry anderson programming computational complexity matrix of cofactors london crochet national lottery correlation plastic ratio python hats turtles tennis matrix of minors graphs royal baby latex world cup anscombe's quartet bubble bobble pythagoras estimation interpolation standard deviation wool hexapawn mathsjam folding paper manchester science festival data visualisation football the aperiodical countdown inverse matrices convergence newcastle golden ratio chess platonic solids map projections cross stitch mathsteroids simultaneous equations martin gardner dates asteroids logic recursion errors edinburgh guest posts exponential growth ucl sobolev spaces inline code news data chebyshev logs pascal's triangle dragon curves javascript misleading statistics preconditioning nine men's morris 24 hour maths geogebra databet geometry game show probability menace mathslogicbot matrices electromagnetic field draughts weak imposition youtube binary games quadrilaterals sorting manchester sound go tmip christmas card triangles european cup zines puzzles logo accuracy radio 4 php runge's phenomenon bempp mean wave scattering frobel boundary element methods chalkdust magazine video games fractals oeis advent calendar raspberry pi hyperbolic surfaces numerical analysis rugby a gamut of games braiding finite group stickers reddit datasaurus dozen probability approximation cambridge finite element method live stream golden spiral speed signorini conditions machine learning talking maths in public error bars weather station sport realhats pac-man final fantasy squares pizza cutting dinosaurs harriss spiral people maths statistics stirling numbers phd dataset

Archive

Show me a random blog post
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2024