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Infinity and Its Paradoxes

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The Hare must first get to where the Tortoise started but during that time the ... Therefore, the Hare never catches the Tortoise! But let's look at how long ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Infinity and Its Paradoxes


1
Infinity and Its Paradoxes
Jonathan Choate Groton School jchoate_at_groton.org w
ww.zebragraph.com
2
The Tortoise and the Hare
  • A Tortoise and a Hare have a race. Being sure he
    will win since he can run at a rate of 10 m/sec
    and the Hare can only run at a rate of 1 m/sec,
    the Hare gives the Tortoise a 10 meter head
    start.

3
  • This was a big mistake since
  • The Hare must first get to where the Tortoise
    started but during that time the Tortoise has
    moved forward to some position P1.

4
  • Now the Hare has to get to P1, but the Hare has
    now moved to P2.
  • Now the Hare has to get to P2, but the Hare has
    now moved to P3.
  • Now the Hare has to get to P3, but the Hare has
    now moved to P4.
  • on and on and on and . .

5
  • Therefore, the Hare never catches the
    Tortoise!!!!!!

6
  • But lets look at how long the race lasted.

7
A Monster Curve
8
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9
  • The Koch Curve is the limit of this process
  • and has
  • -an infinite number of sides with length 0
  • -an infinite perimeter.
  • A bounded curve with an infinite perimeter!
  • Wow!

10
A Monster Shape
  • Start with a tetrahedron with edges of length
    1, total surface area S, volume V and perimeter 6.

11
  • Make 4 copies of the tetrahedron scaled by a
    factor of ½ and you get a shape which has
  • - a surface area of 4 (1/4)S S
  • - a volume of 4(1/8)V (1/2)V
  • - a perimeter of 4(1/2)6 12

12
  • Make 4 copies of the previous shape scaled by
    a factor of ½ and you get a shape which has
  • - a surface area of 4 (1/4)S S
  • - a volume of (1/2) (1/2)V (1/4)V
  • -a perimeter of 4(1/2)12 24

13
  • Make 4 copies of the previous shape scaled by a
    factor of ½ and you get a shape which has
  • - a surface area of 4 (1/4)S S
  • - a volume of (1/2) (1/4)V (1/8)V
  • - a perimeter of 4(1/2)24 48

14
  • Repeat this process several more times and
    you get

15
  • The limiting shape of this process will have
  • - a surface area of S
  • - a perimeter of length
  • - volume of 0

16
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17
  • Welcome to Hilberts Hotel
  • The hotel which is full but never full because it
    always has rooms.
  • How does Heir Hilbert do it?

18
  • If you arrived and needed a room, he would get
    on the PA system and announce

19
  • Attention Everybody add 1 to your room number
    and move.
  • And then he would give you the key to room 1.
  • 1

20
  • If 100 new people arrived and needed rooms,
    Heir Hilbert would get on the PA system and
    announce

21
  • Attention Everybody add 100 to your room number
    and move.
  • And then he would hand out the keys to the first
    100 rooms.
  • 100

22
  • If a bus with new people arrived and
    needed rooms, Heir Hilbert would get on the PA
    system and announce

23
  • Attention Everybody double your room number
    and move to that room.
  • He would then turn to all the newcomers who
    had just arrived in a bus with numbered seats
    and announce.

24
  • Please take your seat number and subtract 1
    from it, multiply the result by 2 and add 1. This
    is your room number.
  • He would then hand out all the odd numbered
    keys.

25
  • If buses arrived each with
    people all who needed rooms, Heir Hilbert would
    get on the PA system and announce

26
  • Attention Please subtract 1 from your room
    number, multiply the result by 2 and add 1.

27
  • He then would say to the new arrivals take your
    reservation number and multiply it by 2. This is
    your room number.
  • He would then hand keys for all the even
    numbered rooms

28
  • Unfortunately, no one had given the new arrivals
    their reservation number so Heir Hilbert had to
    figure out a way of assigning each new arrival a
    unique reservation number.

29
  • Can you come up with a formula that given a
    persons bus number M and seat number N will
    provide a unique number R?

30
Seat Number
Bus
31
Seat Number
Bus
32
x
33
The Continuum Chateau
  • Could there exist a hotel that has more rooms
    than Hilberts Hotel. Consider the following
  • Assume that there is a hotel whose rooms are
    labeled with all possible infinite decimal
    expansions of the form
  • 0 .d1d2d3d4. . .

34
  • Form the list where dij is the digit in the
  • i-th number in the list in the j-th place.Here
    is the list with where they are in the list
  • Room Number
  • 1 0.d11d12d13d14d15. . . .. .
  • 2 0.d21d22d23d24d25.. . .
  • 3 0.d31d32d33d34d35.. . .

  • Etc.

35
  • There is a problem here..
  • The room whose assigned number differs from
  • -the first number in the first decimal place
    i.e it is not equal to .d11 .
  • -the second number in the second decimal place
    i.e it is not equal to .d22 .

36
  • -the third number in the third decimal place i.e
    it is not equal to .d33 .
  • -the n-th number in the n-th place i.e it is not
    equal to .dnn .
  • The number 0.x1x2x3x4. . . where xi is some
    integer between 0 and 9 such that xi ? dii is not
    in the list.

37
  • Contradiction! Therefore the set of rooms with
    room numbers of the form 0. 0.d1d2d3d4. . . is
    not countable and its cardinality must be greater
    than .
  • The preceeding is an argument for the fact that
    there are more positive reals on the interval ( 0
    , 1 ) than there are rationals.
  • But is the source of a theorem that still has
    no proof.

38
The Continuum Hypothesis
  • There is no set whose size is strictly between
    that of the integers and that of the real
    numbers.
  • This is one of David Hilberts 10 Great
    Problems which he stated in 1900. Prove it and
    youll be very, very famous!

39
The Cantor Set
The Cantor Set is the limit of this process. How
many points in the Cantor Set?
40
  • Calculate how much of the Unit Interval you
    have removed as you create the Cantor Set.

41
Binary Numbers
  • In our base 10 system the number 357.45 is a
    shorthand for the polynomial
  • 310 2 510 1 7 10 0 410-1 510-2
  • In base 2, system the number 101.11 is a
    shorthand for the polynomial
  • 12 2 02 1 12 012 -112-2

42
  • In base 10
  • 122 021 12012-1 12-2
  • equals
  • 4 1 ½ ¼ 5 .75
  • Every point in the interval 0, 1 can be
    expressed as a binary decimal.

43
Ternary Numbers
  • These are numbers whose digits can be 0, 1, or
    2.
  • -If a ternary decimal starts with a 0, it must
    lie in the first third of the unit interval.
  • -If a ternary decimal starts with a 1, it must
    lie in the middle third of the unit interval.
  • -If a ternary decimal starts with a 2, it must
    lie in the second third of the unit interval.

44
  • Going back to the Cantor Set
  • When you knock out the middle third, you have
    knocked out all decimals which have a leading
    decimal of 1. This means no point in the Cantor
    Set can have a leading digit of 1. Put another
    way the leading digit of any point in the Cantor
    Set has to be either a 0 or a 2

45
  • By a similar argument, you can show that when you
    knock out the middle thirds of the
  • intervals 0,1/3 and 2/3, 1 , you are left
    with the intervals
  • When the middle thirds of these two intervals are
    removed , you have eliminated all decimals which
    have a 1 in the second place.

46
  • In a similar manner, you can argue that the
    Cantor Set is the set of all decimals of the form
    0.x1x2x3x4 where ti is either 0 or 2.
  • Take the entire set of points in the Cantor Set
    and replace every 2 with a 1 and you have all
    possible decimals of the form
  • 0.b1b2b3b4. . .
  • Where each bi is either 0 or 1.

47
  • But this means that there is 1-1
    correspondence between the points in the Cantor
    Set and the points in the Unit interval. Which
    means they have the same cardinality!
    YIKES!!!!!!!
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