[Mathmajors] Math Across Campus Talk: Peter Lu (Harvard) April 20 @
4pm & April 21 @ 3:30
Math & ACMS Student Services Office
mathadv at uw.edu
Wed Apr 19 11:05:00 PDT 2023
Dear Math & ACMS Majors,
There is a Math Across Campus talk happening this week that you might be interested in. In addition to the public talk on Friday, undergrads are specifically invited to meet the speaker on Thursday April 20 at 4:00pm in PDL C-401. This meeting is informal and just a chance to talk with the speaker, learn more about what they do and about their talk the next day.
Peter Lu (Harvard)
Thursday April 20 4:00-5:00
PDL C-401
Undergrad meet & greet with MAC lecturer
Friday April 21 3:30-4:30
ECE 125
"Girih Tiles: Modern Math in Medieval Islamic Architecture"
The conventional view holds that geometric star-and-polygon patterns
adorning medieval Islamic architecture were designed using a straightedge and a compass, derived from ancient Greek mathematical techniques, which describes accurately a large number of examples. However, a wide variety of patterns throughout the medieval Islamic world with five- and ten-fold symmetric motifs, were conceived as tessellations of specific decorated polygons, called girih tiles, that appear in architectural scrolls from the 15th century, that documented practical architectural techniques and emerged in the context of dialogs between architects and mathematicians. These girih tiles were used like puzzle pieces to design a large number of geometric tiling patterns in architecture, beginning with 12th-century
architectural monuments in the Anatolian Seljuk cultural context, in what is today western Iran and eastern Turkey. Interestingly, perhaps half of the extant Seljuk buildings with girih-tile tesselations had female sponsors, patrons or dedications---hinting at an important contribution from women that has not been previously explored adequately. Subsequently, these girih-tile tessellations spread throughout the medieval Islamic world, from North Africa to the Middle East and Central Asia, for half a millennium. Remarkably, in a few cases, these girih-tile tessellations exhibit mathematical principles of quasicrystallinity, that we in the West did not understand until the past few decades in the form of Penrose tilings.
Best regards,
Math & ACMS Advising
Department of Mathematics
Padelford Hall C-36
Drop-in Advising Hours<https://math.washington.edu/advising-academic-support#ZoomDrop-in>
Math and ACMS Blog<https://uwmathandacms.wordpress.com/blog/>
math.washington.edu<https://math.washington.edu/> acms.washington.edu<http://acms.washington.edu/>
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