Читать книгу What We Cannot Know: Explorations at the Edge of Knowledge - Marcus Sautoy du - Страница 25

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If nature were not beautiful it would not be worth knowing, and if nature were not worth knowing, life would not be worth living.

Henri Poincaré

I wasted a lot of time at university playing billiards in our student common room. I could have pretended that it was all part of my research into angles and stuff, but the truth is that I was procrastinating. It was a good way of putting off having to cope with not being able to answer that week’s set of problems. But in fact the billiard table hides a lot of interesting mathematics in its contours. Mathematics that is highly relevant to my desire to understand my dice.

If I shoot a ball round a billiard table and mark its path, then follow that by shooting another ball off in very nearly the same direction, the second ball will trace out a very similar path to the first ball. Poincaré had believed that the same principle applied to the solar system. Fire a planet off in a slightly different direction then the solar system will evolve in a very similar pattern. This is most people’s intuition: if I make a small change in the initial conditions of the planet’s trajectory it won’t alter the course of the planet much. But the solar system seems to be playing a slightly more interesting game of billiards than the one I played as a student.

Rather surprisingly, if I change the shape of the billiard table this intuition turns out to be wrong. For example, fire balls round a billiard table shaped like a stadium with semicircular ends but straight sides and the paths can diverge dramatically even though they started in almost the same direction. This is the signature of chaos: sensitivity to very small changes in the initial conditions.


Two quickly diverging paths taken by a billiard ball round a stadium-shaped billiard table.

So the challenge for me is to determine whether the fall of my dice is predictable, like a conventional game of billiards, or whether the dice is playing a game of chaotic billiards.

What We Cannot Know: Explorations at the Edge of Knowledge

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