The golden ratio has been around forever, but people did not discover it until around the time of the early Egyptians.
the golden ratio hasn't relation to statistic ! it is statement about rectangular triangles with edges 3,4,5 that named by Pythagoras Greek mathematician B.C.
Fibonacci didn't discover the golden ratio. It had been used thousands of years earlier,for example in construction of religious architecture by the Greeks, who considered it themost perfect and visually pleasing ratio of structural length to width. Fibonacci studied asimple numerical series that generates the number equal to the golden ratio.The number is also the solution to the equation: [ (x - 1) = 1/x ].
The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.
Pythagoras. He didint invent them he discover them.
No. Pythagoras came up with the Pythagorean Theorem and Golden Ratio, though.
the golden ratio hasn't relation to statistic ! it is statement about rectangular triangles with edges 3,4,5 that named by Pythagoras Greek mathematician B.C.
The golden ratio has been around forever, but people did not discover it until around the time of the early Egyptians.
No, they are not the same, but relate to each other. The medial right triangle of this "golden" pyramid, demonstrated the Pythagorean theorem through the relationship of the two. Ancient Greek mathematicians first studied the golden ratio because of its frequent appearance in geometry. The division of a line into "extreme and mean ratio" (the golden section) is important in the geometry of regular pentagrams and pentagons. The Greeks usually attributed discovery of this concept to Pythagoras.
Saturn
the golden ratio hasn't relation to statistic ! it is statement about rectangular triangles with edges 3,4,5 that named by Pythagoras Greek mathematician B.C.
he played the lyre
Cause
Fibonacci didn't discover the golden ratio. It had been used thousands of years earlier,for example in construction of religious architecture by the Greeks, who considered it themost perfect and visually pleasing ratio of structural length to width. Fibonacci studied asimple numerical series that generates the number equal to the golden ratio.The number is also the solution to the equation: [ (x - 1) = 1/x ].
Yes, it's called Pythagoras theorem
he dicovered it in greece
The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.The golden ratio is a pure number and so has no dimensions.