Nature, The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers
Nature, The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers
Nature, The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers
H ow Far t o Turn?
So, if you were a plant, how much of a turn would you have in between new cells?
If you don't turn at all, you get a straight line.
(By the way, it doesn't matter about the whole number part, like 1. or 5. because they are
full revolutions that point us back in the same direction.)
W hy ?
Any number that is a simple fraction (example: 0.75 is 3/4, and 0.95 is 19/20, etc) will,
after a while, make a pattern of lines stacking up, which makes gaps.
But the Golden Ratio (its symbol is the Greek letter Phi, shown at left)
is an expert at not being any fraction.
It is an Irrational Number (meaning we cannot write it as a simple
fraction), but more than that ... it is as far as we can get from being
near any fraction.
Fibonacci N um bers
There is a special relationship between the Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers (0, 1, 1,
2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, ... etc, each number is the sum of the two numbers before it).
When we take any two successive (one after the other) Fibonacci Numbers, their ratio is
very close to the Golden Ratio:
A
B/A
1.5
1.666666666...
1.6
13
1.625
13
21
1.615384615...
...
...
144
233
1.618055556...
233
377
1.618025751...
...
...
...
...
So, just like we naturally get seven arms when we use 0.142857
(1/7), we tend to get Fibonacci Numbers when we use the Golden
Ratio.
Try counting the spiral arms - the "left turning" spirals, and then the
"right turning" spirals ... what numbers did you get?
In fact, when a plant has spirals the rotation tends to be a fraction made with two
successive (one after the other) Fibonacci Numbers, for example:
A half rotation is 1/2 (1 and 2 are Fibonacci Numbers)
3/5 is also common (both Fibonacci Numbers), and
5/8 also (you guessed it!)
all getting closer and closer to the Golden Ratio.
But we don't see this in all plants, as nature has many different methods of survival.
G olden A ngle
So far we have been talking about "turns" (full rotations).
The equivalent of 0.61803... rotations is 222.4922... degrees, or
about 222.5.
In the other direction it is about 137.5, called the "Golden
Angle".
So, next time you are walking in the garden, look for the Golden Angle,
and count petals and leaves to find Fibonacci Numbers,
and discover how clever the plants are ... !
Exercise
Why don't you go into the garden or park right now, and start counting leaves and petals,
and measuring rotations to see what you find.
You can write your results on this form:
Plant Name or Description:
Do the Leaves Grow in Spirals? Y / N
Count a group of Leaves:
How many leaves (a) ?
How many full rotations (b) ?
Rotation per leaf (b/a) :
Rotation Angle (360 b/a) :