Archive for June, 2011

Move over, Plato

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

math flow shapeGeometry’s answer to the atom: shapes that can’t be broken down into smaller shapes. These “edgeless” shapes are described rather as “flow”, and a unique flow pattern makes a shape an atom.

“Mathematicians are creating their own version of the periodic table that will provide a vast directory of all the possible shapes in the universe across three, four and five dimensions, linking shapes together in the same way as the periodic table links groups of chemical elements.

The researchers, from Imperial College London and institutions in Australia, Japan and Russia, are aiming to identify all the shapes across three, four and five dimensions that cannot be divided into other shapes.”

Calabi Yau

Calabi Yau

“The scientists will be analyzing shapes that involve dimensions that cannot be ‘seen’ in a conventional sense in the physical world. For example, the space-time described by Einstein’s Theory of Relativity has four dimensions – the three spatial dimensions, plus time.

String theorists believe that the universe is made up of many additional hidden dimensions that cannot be seen. They have already figured out how to turn flowing, higher dimensional shapes into differential equations. The Calabi-Yau manifold represents the 10 dimensions of string theory. A similar mathematical method is being used to search for unique shape “atoms”. There are hundreds of millions of potential shapes to examine, but researchers expect to find a few thousand atoms amongst them.”

They’re quite beautiful, but the static images are only part of the story. There are a few animations on the web of these shapes in motion. For shapes that are defined as “flow” the motion seems important. Yet no matter how we view these shapes, for our eyes they’re always going to be merely the illusion of three dimensions on a two-dimensional plane. We aren’t going to experience them in five dimensions.*

math flow shapemath flow shape

* Bucket list:

1. Experience the Calabi Yau in all ten dimensions.

Website launch: Cherie Haney, Metals Artist

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

cherie_haneyBlue Mouse Monkey recently launched a new website for Ann Arbor metals artist Cherie Haney. Cherie was chafing under the constraints of a Carbonmade website and approached Blue Mouse Monkey for a completely custom solution. The new site is built on Cherie’s aesthetic of organic shapes in layered planes, using the colors of steel, rust, and mineralization. The store is scalable, and the content management system allows Cherie to update her trade show schedule and other information. Cherie is represented by over fifty galleries across the US, and this website will help promote her work even further.