Divided Spheres: Geodesics and the Orderly Subdivision of the Sphere

Author:   Edward S. Popko ,  Christopher J. Kitrick
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Edition:   2nd edition
ISBN:  

9780367680749


Pages:   454
Publication Date:   25 September 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Divided Spheres: Geodesics and the Orderly Subdivision of the Sphere


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Author:   Edward S. Popko ,  Christopher J. Kitrick
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   CRC Press
Edition:   2nd edition
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367680749


ISBN 10:   0367680742
Pages:   454
Publication Date:   25 September 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"""Divided Spheres presents a wealth of ideas and images for anyone interested in spherical constructions. The section on the history of geodesic dome design and the chapter with new material on rotegrities and nexorades are particularly notable. Popko's book is sure to spark the creative juices of readers who love geometry and who think about making physical spherical structures."" – George Hart, Mathematician and Sculptor ""Edward Popko and Christopher Kitrick's Divided Spheres unfolds the Orderly Subdivision of the Sphere into a comprehensive and growing survey of the historical, spherical, polyhedral, mathematical and material patterns inherent in such a universal question... A fundamental resource for anyone interested in exploring the order, and part-to-whole relationships of any formal system in design."" – Daniel Lopez-Perez, Associate Professor of Architecture and a founding faculty member of the Architecture Program at the University of San Diego, and author of R. Buckminster Fuller, Pattern-Thinking ""I value Divided Spheres highly, as a pithy primer for anyone wishing a fresh approach to spherical geometry, and to geometry in general. As a curriculum developer, I include it in any syllabus that also includes R. Buckminster Fuller's Synergetics, as a complementary and enlightening investigation. The pattern language of spheres comes through loud and clear in this book."" – Kirby Urner, 4D Solutions ""Divided Spheres is simply a tour de force. The book’s comprehensive coverage and clear, elegant writing are remarkable—and enhanced by compelling figures throughout the text. Popko and Kitrick have managed to make three-dimensional geometry accessible without oversimplifying their material. – Amy C. Edmondson, PhD., Author of A Fuller Explanation: The Synergetic Geometry of Buckminster Fuller, Professor, Harvard Business School""Ed Popko & Christopher Kitrick’s newly revised and updated edition of Popko’s book, Divided Spheres is a marvellously detailed homage to the geometry of the sphere and spherical polyhedra. The field has grown significantly since 2012 when the original book was published. This new edition elevates Divided Spheres as the definitive resource for the history of 20th century breakthroughs in geodesics by two practitioners who are part of that history. Full color computer generated images and excellent writings by Kitrick introduce fresh and unique approaches. The eloquent foreword by geodesics expert Joseph Clinton clarifies how designers, students, scholars or practitioners of any discipline can take their own pathways through the voluminous material in the book to find value and insights along the way. It also serves as a comprehensive handbook featuring a range of techniques for tessellating the sphere."" – Bonnie DeVarco, FRSE, MediaX Fellow ""If the sphere is the sovereign of the kingdom of geometric shapes, then this book could rightly be said to be the complete chronicle of its many deeds. Its contents will undoubtedly be quoted and used by scientists and artists the world over (including Japanese researchers or creators of traditional spherical artifacts such as Temari balls or Origami polyhedra) thanks to the crystal-clear explanations and the wonderful accompanying graphics, which helps in overcoming even the steepest language barriers."" – Koji Miyazaki, Professor Emeritus at Kyoto University and author of The Japanese Encyclopedia of Polygons (2015), Polyhedra (2016) and Polytopes (2020). ""Divided Spheres is about spherical subdivision techniques and their applications. It provides an authentic description of the results of Buckminster Fuller and his circle in this field, but beyond geodesic domes, it discusses several old and new practical applications in cartography, astronomy, virus research, dimple patterns of golf balls, fish farming and in many more subjects. Important geometrical problems related to spherical subdivision such as spherical circle packings and coverings, as well as polyhedra with extremal properties are also treated. It contains a detailed mathematical description of effective subdivision methods according to which the reader can execute calculations and determine the data of his/her geodesic network. The book is well written and beautifully illustrated and can be read by specialists and general readers alike."" – Tibor Tarnai, Professor Emeritus at Budapest University of Technology and Economics ""This is an exceptionally well-produced book on spherical subdivisions with beautiful, colored illustrations, all digital. This book is on a topic of continuing interest despite its long history, and it always brings new surprises like that gem on ‘self-organizing grids’ included in this edition. Ideas, old and new, are collected in this careful methodical work which brings together the history and advancement of spherical structures and their implications across different fields. It is written by two expert practitioners from the early pioneering days of the field. Their treatise is a reminder that rigor, depth and beauty go hand in hand, and are a requirement for lasting works like this."" – Haresh Lalvani, Pratt Institute This is a fascinating and beautiful book on a narrow topic (spherical geometry) of widespread appeal and application. Naturally, the book harks back to R. Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic domes and the 31 great circles of a spherical icosahedron; the main author is an architect. But spherical design occurs also in pollen grains, viruses, maps, fish pens, and implementations of puzzles similar to Rubik’s Cube. It turns out that it is not easy to distribute points evenly on a sphere! Applications include locations of cellphone towers, orbits of satellites, golf balls (there is a whole chapter on them), and pharmaceuticals. The book develops six schemas for subdividing a sphere and offers comparisons for different purposes. Other chapters present basic spherical geometry and grids on spheres. Appendices treat at length stereographic projection, coordinate rotations via matrices, and geodesic math. Almost every page contains a figure or illustration, many of them in color. – Mathematics Magazine, MAA Praise for the previous edition ""Ed Popko's comprehensive survey of the history, literature, geometric and mathematical properties of the sphere is the definitive work on the subject. His masterful and thorough investigation of every aspect is covered with sensitivity and intelligence. This book should be in the library of anyone interested in the orderly subdivision of the sphere."" —Shoji Sadao, Architect, Cartographer and lifelong business partner of Buckminster Fuller ""Edward Popko's Divided Spheres is a 'thesaurus' must to those whose academic interest in the world of geometry looks to greater coverage of synonyms and antonyms of this beautiful shape we call a sphere. The late Buckminster Fuller might well place this manuscript as a all-reference for illumination to one of nature's most perfect invention."" —Thomas T. K. Zung, Senior Partner, Buckminster Fuller, Sadao & Zung Architects ""I have loved the beauty and symmetry of polyhedra and spherical divisions for many years. My own efforts have been concentrated on making both simple and complex spherical models using classical methods and simple tools. Dr. Popko’s elegant new book extends both the science and the art of spherical modeling to include Computer-Aided Design and applications, which I would never have imagined when I started down this fascinating and rewarding path. His lovely illustrations bring the subject to life for all readers, including those who are not drawn to the mathematics. This book demonstrates the scope, beauty and utility of an art and science with roots in an-tiquity. Spherical subdivision is relevant today and useful for the future. Anyone with an interest in the geometry of spheres, whether a professional engineer, an architect or product designer, a student, a teacher, or simply someone curious about the spectrum of topics to be found in this book, will find it helpful and rewarding."" —Magnus Wenninger, Benedictine Monk and Polyhedral Modeler ""Edward Popko’s Divided Spheres is the definitive source for the many varied ways a sphere can be divided and subdivided. From domes and pollen grains to golf balls, every category and type is elegantly described in these pages. The mathematics and the images together amount to a marvelous collection, one of those rare works that will be on the bookshelf of anyone with an interest in the wonders of geometry."" —Kenneth Snelson, Sculptor and Photographer ""My own discovery, Waterman Polyhedra, was my way to see hidden patterns in ordered points in space. Ed's book, Divided Spheres, is about patterns and points too but on spheres. He shows you how to solve practical design problems based spherical polyhedra. Novices and experts will understand the challenges and classic techniques of spherical design just by looking at the many beautiful illustrations."" —Steve Waterman, Mathematician"


Author Information

Edward S. Popko is a graduate of the University of Detroit’s School of Architecture and has both Masters and PhD degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is a registered architect and former Fulbright Scholar. In the 1960s, he was an apprentice in Buckminster Fuller’s affiliate office, Geometrics, Inc., in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and later authored Geodesics, a primer on geodesic domes, and Transitions, a documentary of urban settlements in developing countries. For the past 25 years, he has held research, product development, and marketing positions for Computer Aided Design and Geographic Information Systems technology within IBM. He has managed software development teams in computer mapping and CAD solutions for architects, industrial buildings, high‐tech plants, and shipbuilding. He is retired from IBM and lives with his wife, Geraldine, in Woodstock, New York. They have a daughter Ellen and a son Gerald. Christopher J. Kitrick is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati with a bachelor's in Architecture and a masters in Structural Engineering. In the late 1970s he interned for 3 years at Buckminster Fuller's professor emeritus office on the campus of the University of Philadelphia. During that tenure he was involved in Fuller's Synergetics II book, multiple dome developments, tensegrity research, and the first computerized version edition of the Dymaxion Air‐Ocean map. For the past 36 years he has been involved with graphics software and hardware development from mainframe to mobile devices enabling the rapid advancement of visual technology. Independently he has authored and presented numerous technical papers on spherical geometry at international conferences on space structures. He is still working and resides in La Jolla, California, with his wife Tomoko. They have two sons Francis and Ian, and one daughter, Eileen.

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