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B1 中級 英語 27:26 Educational

This open problem taught me what topology is

3Blue1Brown · 2,105,337 回視聴 · 追加日 3週間前

学習統計

B1

CEFRレベル

5/10

難易度

字幕 (465 セグメント)

00:00

Here's a question that nobody in the world knows the answer to.

00:03

Suppose you have some closed continuous curve,

00:05

which essentially means some squiggle you could draw on paper without lifting the pen,

00:09

that ends where it starts.

00:11

If you can find four points somewhere on this loop that make the vertices of a square,

00:16

it's called an inscribed square of the loop.

00:18

And the unsolved question is whether every possible closed

00:22

continuous loop like this necessarily has an inscribed square.

00:27

The question was originally posed by Otto Toeplitz in 1911,

00:30

and it's commonly known as the inscribed square problem.

00:34

One of my all-time favorite pieces of math, easily in the top five,

00:38

is a very beautiful proof for a simpler version of this question,

00:41

asking instead whether you can necessarily find an inscribed rectangle.

00:46

The argument is originally due to Herbert Vaughan, and as a spoiler,

00:49

our discussion here is going to lead you to think about this shape right here,

00:53

what's known as a Klein bottle, but it won't come up as some curiosity or a trinket.

00:58

It arises as a natural problem-solving tool.

01:02

One of the earliest videos that I made for this channel was actually about this proof,

01:06

and I'm making this video as a kind of second edition to that one.

01:09

I realize second editions are much less of a thing for YouTube videos than

01:12

they are for books, but part of my motivation here is that there's been

01:15

more research since that original video that's very much worth discussing.

01:19

Another motivation is that there's numerous caveats and interesting connections

01:23

both beautiful and mind-broadening that are definitely worth including.

01:27

Aside from that, given that it's one of my favorite pieces of math,

01:30

I kind of just want to take a stab at animating it and motivating each one of the steps

01:34

as best as I know how.

01:36

Some of you might ask why on earth anyone would care about

01:39

proving that any closed loop has an inscribed rectangle.

01:43

I personally don't know of any application.

01:45

Frankly, I would be surprised if there was one.

01:47

But I think many of you know that engaging with challenging puzzles,

01:50

even when they're pure puzzles, has a way of sharpening your problem-solving

01:54

instincts in a way that can be carried over to other practical applications later.

01:58

But I can also give you a much more specific reason why I love this particular proof.

02:02

It's something I first saw a long time ago, and I remember it being the

02:06

first time that I felt a sense for what topology is actually all about.

02:10

You see, in a lot of recreational math settings,

02:12

topology is sometimes presented as something like a study of bizarre shapes.

02:17

A common classroom activity might be to apply a half-twist to a thin piece

02:21

of paper and glue the ends together, forming what's called a Möbius strip.

02:25

You might be told this is what's called a non-orientable surface.

02:29

Loosely speaking, this means there's no notion of an inner side or an outer side.

02:32

The whole thing just has one side.

02:35

Topology is also often presented as a sort of rubber sheet geometry,

02:38

where shapes are considered the same if you can deform one into another without

02:42

tearing it.

02:43

Neither of these notions, in my opinion, really captures what it's actually about.

02:47

And when I was growing up, I remember these kinds

02:49

of examples left a frustrating open question.

02:52

How is this math?

02:53

How does any of this actually help you solve problems?

02:55

If you stick with me to the end here, you'll see how these shapes and their bizarre

03:00

properties are not just idle curiosities, but they're actual tools for logic and

03:04

deduction.

03:07

The first step in proving that any closed loop contains a

03:10

rectangle is going to be to reframe the question just a little bit.

03:14

Instead of thinking about four points that are the vertices of a rectangle,

03:18

think about searching for two distinct pairs of points,

03:21

such that the lines connecting each pair have the same midpoint and they

03:25

have the same length.

03:27

Hopefully it's not too hard to convince yourself that this

03:29

really is the same thing as searching for a rectangle.

03:32

If I told you, hey, I found two line segments somewhere out in space,

03:35

and I further specify that both of them have the same center,

03:39

and also that both segments have the same length,

03:41

then the four endpoints of those two different lines have to form a rectangle.

03:46

If you want, you could try to pause and ponder to rigorously prove this.

03:49

It's a relatively straightforward geometry exercise.

03:52

Given some arbitrary closed loop, what you and I are going to do

03:56

is somehow think about all possible pairs of points on that loop.

04:01

For any one of these pairs, we care about two things.

04:04

The first is where its midpoint sits, which you

04:06

might think of as two numbers worth of data.

04:09

The xy coordinates on the plane where the loop sits.

04:12

The other thing we care about is the distance between those points,

04:15

which is another data point.

04:17

Now if you're a mathematician and you see three numbers worth of information like this,

04:22

it is a very natural step to try packaging them together and think of that

04:26

data as being a single point in a three-dimensional space.

04:29

In our example, if you imagine the loop sitting on an xy plane inside that space,

04:34

and its midpoint has some coordinates xy, then this 3d point that we care about,

04:39

the one packaging x, y, and d, could be thought about as a point directly above that

04:44

midpoint, such that the distance off the plane matches the distance between the pair of

04:49

points on the loop.

04:51

Some other pair of points on the loop would correspond

04:53

to some other point in three-dimensional space.

04:56

And in essence, what we have here is a mapping.

04:58

A mapping from pairs of points on the loop to three-dimensional space.

05:03

The important feature of this mapping that we're going to rely on is that it's continuous.

05:07

And essentially what this means is if you just slightly wiggle the input,

05:11

slightly nudging that pair of points, the output only slightly wiggles as well.

05:15

There are never any sudden jumps.

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