7 comments

[ 6.1 ms ] story [ 27.9 ms ] thread
I wanted to say that this was probably discovered by a Hacker News devotee who was sifting through every instance of "pg" on the internet. Then I noticed who submitted this.
I just heard a talk on this the other day at an undergraduate mathematics research conference (SUnMaRC). Apparently, at Al-Andalus there are examples of all 17 different groups. Islamic art has some of the coolest math.
To anyone interested, my favorite treatment of this appears in Artin's extraordinary book Algebra.
Epicdollar startup of the future is:

wallpaper color displays, Philip K. Dick-style.

Top planetary database says this is the closest approximation: http://www.eink.com/display_products_triton.html

No more steaming wallboards and peeling (wo peeling the wallboard backing) when wifey says she likes this other pattern she just found.

Though the idea of wallpaper symmetry may seem a bit frivolous, in truth the mathematics of 2D and 3D symmetry groups plays a huge role in materials science and physics. Every crystalline material is made of atoms in some pattern, and the symmetry of that pattern has big consequences for what the material's electrons do. Understanding the symmetry of a crystal will often aid you in understanding its properties.

This knowledge can also be inverted to design materials rather than merely understand them. An example of this is the idea to use crystals without inversion symmetry to make new ferroelectric materials (because ferroelectricity requires inversion symmetry breaking). A simple way to make a crystal without inversion symmetry to stack layers of atoms in an ABCABCABC pattern. Here's a technical description if you are interested and have access: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v452/n7188/full/nature0...

If you'd like to learn more about the study of symmetry in crystallography, there's a nice MIT OCW set of video lectures here: http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/materials-science-and-engineering...

I'll close with a good quotation from a famous condensed matter physicist:

"It is only slightly overstating the case to say that physics is the study of symmetry." - Nobel Laureate Philip Anderson