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Lénárt sphere

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

István Lénárt demonstrating a number of Lénárt spheres.

A Lénárt sphere is a educational manipulative and writing surface for exploring spherical geometry, invented by Hungarian István Lénárt as a modern replacement for a spherical blackboard.[1][2] It can be used for visualizing the geometry of points, great and small circles, triangles, polygons, conics, and other objects on a sphere, and comparing spherical geometry to Euclidean geometry as drawn on a flat piece of paper or blackboard. The included spherical ruler and compass support synthetic straightedge and compass construction on the sphere.

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Transcription

Products

Equilateral triangle constructed on a Lenart sphere.

The Lénárt sphere and accessories are produced by the company Lénárt Educational Research and Technology.

The basic set includes:[3]

The company also sells replacement parts, extra transparency sheets, wet-wipe markers, and Lénárt's book Non-Euclidean Adventures on the Lenart Sphere, which describes more activities for students.

Related tools

Spherical Easel is an interactive geometry software tool for exploring spherical geometry (see § External links). Other interactive geometry software is typically limited to the flat plane.

History

Spherical trigonometry is fundamental to ancient astronomy and astrology, celestial navigation, and geodesy and cartography, and it used to be a standard part of undergraduate mathematics education. In recent decades hand computations have been replaced by electronic computers and spherical trigonometry has been pushed out of the typical mathematics curriculum by other topics.[1]

The Lénárt sphere was invented by István Lénárt in Hungary in the early 1990s and its use is described in his 2003 book comparing planar and spherical geometry.[4]

The Lénárt sphere is widely used throughout Europe in university courses on non-Euclidean geometry and geographic information systems (GIS).

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Van Brummelen, Glen (2013). Heavenly Mathematics: The Forgotten Art of Spherical Trigonometry. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-14892-2.
  2. ^ 60-page preview of Van Brummelen, see p. xiii on Lenart (image redacted on Google)
  3. ^ "Lenart Sphere". Chartwell-Yorke Maths ICT Store. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  4. ^ Lenart, Istvan (2003), Non-Euclidean Adventures on the Lenart Sphere: Activities Comparing Planar and Spherical Geometry, Key Curriculum Press, ISBN 978-1559531030

External links

This page was last edited on 5 October 2023, at 06:13
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