Symmetry Can Be Found All Around Us.. By Rebecca Dow, Sara Howard, Julie Russell, Jessie Buchheim, and Jordann Tomasek.

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Presentation transcript:

Symmetry Can Be Found All Around Us.

By Rebecca Dow, Sara Howard, Julie Russell, Jessie Buchheim, and Jordann Tomasek

 Definition-The preservation of form and configuration across a point, line or a plane.

 Also known as flips, one half of an image is the mirror image of the other half.

 Point symmetry - any straight cut through the center point divides the organism into mirroring halves. The line of symmetry on each leaf is the stem.

 Butterflies and moths have great reflective/point symmetry. They frequently sit with their wings up so the points touch.

 Another example of this particular symmetry in nature, is a reflection on the water. As we look at this photograph, the ground acts as the bisecting line of symmetry between the two images.

 Rotational symmetry means that one part can be moved around a center and duplicated.  Starfish show rotational symmetry

 The planets, with slight variation due to chance, exhibit rotational symmetry.

 Snowflakes also provide an example of radial symmetry.  They have hexagonal symmetry around an axis. Incredible pictures of real snowflakes can be found at: SnowCrystals.com. SnowCrystals.com

 All snowflakes have this sort of symmetry due to the way water molecules arrange themselves when ice forms.

 People are naturally attracted to symmetry.  A face is considered beautiful when the features are symmetrical (matching on either side).

 Animals also show symmetry between two halves of the body.

 Polygons are closed plane figures made up by 3 or more connecting line segments.

There are polygons found in nature everywhere, you just have to take a closer look! Have you ever stopped to consider how many things that we see in nature that are geometrically arranged?

If you slice a kiwi in half, you will see that the core forms a six-sided shape, also known as a hexagon. This is also true for an apple, except it is a slightly different version of a pentagon, it becomes a star.

Look closely at a pineapple and you will see that all pineapples have the same skin, they are tessellations (repeated) of a trapezoid.

This is an example of a polygon found within a plant. Each leaf is a triangle, a three-sided polygon.. This poppy makes the shape of a regular pentagon.

There are many types of flowers that form polygons. What shapes can you see in these tulips and lilies?

Most polygons found on animals are repetitive, but slightly altered. On these two cheetahs, almost all of the polygons are present, except a solid triangle..

A giraffe’s body is completely covered in regular polygons

Patterns in rocks Patterns in starfish

Look closely at a honeycomb or a wasp nest. Each cell wall stands at a correct 120  angle with respect to one another to form a tessellation of regular hexagons.

 Can you guess at a definition of tessellation? We’ll find out if you are right.

There are so many repeated designs, symmetries, and patterns in our natural world. As you look for them, ask yourself: are these just here by chance, or did a very creative God put them there?