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Taxicab Geometry Chapter 6
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Distance On a number line On a plane with two dimensions Coordinate system skew ( ) or rectangular
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Axiom System for Metric Geometry Formula for measuring metric Example seen on previous slide Results of Activity 6.4Activity 6.4 Distance 0 PQ + QR RP (triangle inequality)
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Axiom System for Metric Geometry Axioms for metric space 1.d(P, Q) 0 d(P, Q) = 0 iff P = Q 2.d(P, Q) = d(Q, P) 3.d(P, Q) + d(Q, R) d(P, R)
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Euclidian Distance Formula Theorem 6.1 Euclidian distance formula satisfies all three metric axioms Hence, the formula is a metric in Demonstrate satisfaction of all 3 axioms
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Taxicab Distance Formula Consider this formula Does this distance formula satisfy all three axioms? Thus, the taxicab distance formula is a metric in
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Application of Taxicab Geometry
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A dispatcher for Ideal City Police Department receives a report of an accident at X = (-1,4). There are two police cars located in the area. Car C is at (2,1) and car D is at (-1,- 1). Which car should be sent? Taxicab Dispatch
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Circles Recall circle definition: The set of all points equidistance from a given fixed center Or Note: this definition does not tell us what metric to use!
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Taxi-Circles Recall Activity 6.5Activity 6.5
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Taxi-Circles Place center of taxi-circle at origin Determine equations of lines Note how any point on line has taxi-cab distance = r
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Ellipse Defined as set off all points, P, sum of whose distances from F 1 and F 2 is a constant
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Ellipse Activity 6.2 Note resulting locus of points Each point satisfies ellipse defn. What happened with foci closer together?
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Ellipse Now use taxicab metric First with the two points on a diagonal
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Ellipse End result is an octagon Corners are where both sides intersect
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Ellipse Now when foci are vertical
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Ellipse End result is a hexagon Again, four of the sides are where sides of both “circles” intersect
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Distance – Point to Line In Chapter 4 we used a circle Tangent to the line Centered at the point Distance was radius of circle which intersected line in exactly one point
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Distance – Point to Line Apply this to taxicab circle Activity 6.8, finding radius of smallest circle which intersects the line in exactly one point Activity 6.8 Note: slope of line - 1 < m < 1 Rule?
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Distance – Point to Line When slope, m = 1 What is the rule for the distance?
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Distance – Point to Line When |m| > 1 What is the rule?
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Parabolas Quadratic equations Parabola All points equidistant from a fixed point and a fixed line Fixed line called directrix
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Taxicab Parabolas From the definition Consider use of taxicab metric
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Taxicab Parabolas Remember All distances are taxicab-metric
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Taxicab Parabolas When directrix has slope < 1
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Taxicab Parabolas When directrix has slope > 0
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Taxicab Parabolas What does it take to have the “parabola” open downwards?
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Locus of Points Equidistant from Two Points
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Taxicab Hyperbola
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Equilateral Triangle
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Axiom Systems Definition of Axiom System: A formal statement Most basic expectations about a concept We have seen Euclid’s postulates Metric axioms (distance) Another axiom system to consider What does between mean?
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Application of Taxicab Geometry
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We want to draw school district boundaries such that every student is going to the closest school. There are three schools: Jefferson at (-6, -1), Franklin at (-3, -3), and Roosevelt at (2,1). Find “lines” equidistant from each set of schools
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Application of Taxicab Geometry Solution to school district problem
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Taxicab Geometry Chapter 6
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