Symmetry in common usage generally conveys two primary meanings. The first is an imprecise sense of harmonious or
aesthetically-pleasing proportionality and balance; such that it reflects beauty or perfection. The second meaning is a precise
and well-defined concept of balance or "patterned self-similarity" that can be demonstrated or proved according to the rules of a
formal system: by geometry, through physics or otherwise.[1]
Although the meanings are distinguishable, in some contexts, both meanings of "symmetry" are related and discussed in
parallel.[2][3]
The "precise" notions of symmetry have various measures and operational definitions. For example, symmetry may be
observed:
This article describes these notions of symmetry from three perspectives. The first is that of mathematics, in which symmetries are defined and categorized precisely. The second perspective describes
symmetry as it relates to science and technology. In this
context, symmetries underlie some of the most profound results of modern physics, including
aspects of space and time. Finally, a third perspective discusses symmetry in the
humanities, covering its rich and varied use in history,
architecture, art, and religion.
The opposite of symmetry is asymmetry.
Symmetry in mathematics
In formal terms, we say that an object is symmetric with respect to a given mathematical operation, if, when applied to the object, this operation does not change the
object or its appearance. Two objects are symmetric to each other with respect to a given group of operations if one is obtained
from the other by some of the operations (and vice versa).
Symmetries may also be found in living organisms including humans and other animals (see symmetry in biology below). In 2D geometry the main kinds of symmetry of interest are with
respect to the basic Euclidean plane isometries: translations, rotations, reflections, and glide reflections.
Mathematical model for symmetry
The set of all symmetry operations considered, on all objects in a set X, can be modelled as a group action g : G × X → X, where the image of g in G and
x in X is written as g·x. If, for some g, g·x = y then x and
y are said to be symmetrical to each other. For each object x, operations g for which g·x =
x form a group, the symmetry
group of the object, a subgroup of G. If the symmetry group of x is the trivial group then x is
said to be asymmetric, otherwise symmetric. A general example is that G is a group of bijections g:
V → V acting on the set of functions x: V → W by (gx)(v)=x(g−1(v)) (or a
restricted set of such functions that is closed under the group action). Thus a group of bijections of space induces a group
action on "objects" in it. The symmetry group of x consists of all g for which x(v)=x(g(v)) for all
v. G is the symmetry group of the space itself, and of any object that is uniform throughout space. Some subgroups
of G may not be the symmetry group of any object. For example, if the group contains for every v and w in
V a g such that g(v)=w, then only the symmetry groups of constant functions x contain that group.
However, the symmetry group of constant functions is G itself.
In a modified version for vector fields, we have
(gx)(v)=h(g,x(g−1(v))) where h rotates any vectors and pseudovectors in x, and inverts any
vectors (but not pseudovectors) according to rotation and inversion in g, see symmetry in physics. The symmetry group of x consists of all g for which
x(v)=h(g,x(g(v))) for all v. In this case the symmetry group of a constant function may be a proper subgroup of
G: a constant vector has only rotational symmetry with respect to rotation about an axis if that axis is in the direction
of the vector, and only inversion symmetry if it is zero.
For a common notion of symmetry in Euclidean space, G is the Euclidean group E(n), the group of isometries, and
V is the Euclidean space. The rotation group of an object is the symmetry group if G is restricted to
E+(n), the group of direct isometries. (For generalizations, see the next subsection.) Objects can be
modeled as functions x, of which a value may represent a selection of properties such as color, density, chemical
composition, etc. Depending on the selection we consider just symmetries of sets of points (x is just a boolean function of position v), or, at the other extreme, e.g. symmetry of right and left hand
with all their structure.
For a given symmetry group, the properties of part of the object, fully define the whole object. Considering points
equivalent which, due to the symmetry, have the same properties, the
equivalence classes are the orbits of the group
action on the space itself. We need the value of x at one point in every orbit to define the full object. A set of such
representatives forms a fundamental domain. The smallest fundamental domain does not
have a symmetry; in this sense, one can say that symmetry relies upon asymmetry.
An object with a desired symmetry can be produced by choosing for every orbit a single function value. Starting from a given
object x we can e.g.:
- take the values in a fundamental domain (i.e., add copies of the object)
- take for each orbit some kind of average or sum of the values of x at the points of the orbit (ditto, where the copies
may overlap)
If it is desired to have no more symmetry than that in the symmetry group, then the object to be copied should be
asymmetric.
As pointed out above, some groups of isometries are not the symmetry group of any object, except in the modified model for
vector fields. For example, this applies in 1D for the group of all translations. The fundamental domain is only one point, so we
can not make it asymmetric, so any "pattern" invariant under translation is also invariant under reflection (these are the
uniform "patterns").
In the vector field version continuous translational symmetry does not imply reflectional symmetry: the function value is
constant, but if it contains nonzero vectors, there is no reflectional symmetry. If there is also reflectional symmetry, the
constant function value contains no nonzero vectors, but it may contain nonzero pseudovectors. A corresponding 3D example is an
infinite cylinder with a current perpendicular to the axis; the magnetic field (a pseudovector) is, in the direction of the
cylinder, constant, but nonzero. For vectors (in particular the current density) we have
symmetry in every plane perpendicular to the cylinder, as well as cylindrical symmetry. This cylindrical symmetry without mirror
planes through the axis is also only possible in the vector field version of the symmetry concept. A similar example is a
cylinder rotating about its axis, where magnetic field and current density are replaced by angular momentum and velocity, respectively.
A symmetry group is said to act transitively on a repeated feature of an object if, for every pair of occurrences of the
feature there is a symmetry operation mapping the first to the second. For example, in 1D, the symmetry group of
{...,1,2,5,6,9,10,13,14,...} acts transitively on all these points, while {...,1,2,3,5,6,7,9,10,11,13,14,15,...} does not
act transitively on all points. Equivalently, the first set is only one conjugacy class
with respect to isometries, while the second has two classes.
Non-isometric symmetry
As mentioned above, G (the symmetry group of the space itself) may differ from the Euclidean group, the group of isometries.
Examples:
- G is the group of affine transformations with a matrix A with determinant 1 or -1, i.e. the transformation which
preserve area; this adds e.g. oblique reflection symmetry.
- G is the group of all bijective affine transformations
- In inversive geometry, G includes circle reflections, etc.
- More generally, an involution defines a symmetry with respect to that involution.
Directional symmetry
See directional symmetry.
Reflection symmetry
See reflection symmetry.
Reflection symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection.
It is the most common type of symmetry[citation needed]. In 2D there is an axis of symmetry, in 3D a plane of symmetry. An object
or figure which is indistinguishable from its transformed image is called mirror symmetric (see mirror image).
The axis of symmetry of a two-dimensional figure is a line such that, if a perpendicular is constructed, any two points lying
on the perpendicular at equal distances from the axis of symmetry are identical. Another way to think about it is that if the
shape were to be folded in half over the axis, the two halves would be identical: the two halves are each other's mirror image.
Thus a square has four axes of symmetry, because there are four different ways to fold
it and have the edges all match. A circle has infinitely many axes of symmetry, for the same
reason.
If the letter T is reflected along a vertical axis, it appears the same. Note that this is sometimes called horizontal
symmetry, and sometimes vertical symmetry! One can better use an unambiguous formulation, e.g. "T has a vertical symmetry
axis."
The triangles with this symmetry are isosceles, the
quadrilaterals with this symmetry are the kites
and the isosceles trapezoids.
For each line or plane of reflection, the symmetry group is isomorphic with Cs (see point
groups in three dimensions), one of the three types of order two (involutions), hence algebraically C2. The fundamental
domain is a half-plane or half-space.
Bilateria (bilateral animals, including humans) are more or less symmetric with respect to
the sagittal plane.
In certain contexts there is rotational symmetry anyway. Then mirror-image symmetry is equivalent with inversion symmetry; in
such contexts in modern physics the term P-symmetry is used for both (P stands for parity).
For more general types of reflection there are corresponding more general types of reflection symmetry. Examples:
- with respect to circle inversion
Rotational symmetry
See rotational symmetry.
Rotational symmetry is symmetry with respect to some or all rotations in m-dimensional Euclidean space. Rotations are direct
isometries, i.e., isometries preserving orientation. Therefore a symmetry
group of rotational symmetry is a subgroup of E+(m) (see Euclidean group).
Symmetry with respect to all rotations about all points implies translational symmetry with respect to all translations, and
the symmetry group is the whole E+(m). This does not apply for objects because it makes space homogeneous, but it may apply for
physical laws.
For symmetry with respect to rotations about a point we can take that point as origin. These rotations form the
special orthogonal group SO(m), the group of m×m orthogonal matrices with determinant 1. For m=3 this is the
rotation group.
In another meaning of the word, the rotation group of an object is the symmetry group within E+(n), the group of direct
isometries; in other words, the intersection of the full symmetry group and the group of direct isometries. For chiral objects it
is the same as the full symmetry group.
Laws of physics are SO(3)-invariant if they do not distinguish different directions in space. Because of Noether's theorem, rotational symmetry of a physical system is equivalent to the angular momentum
conservation law. See also rotational invariance.
Translational symmetry
See main article translational symmetry.
Translational symmetry leaves an object invariant under a discrete or continuous group of translations Ta(p) = p +
a
Glide reflection symmetry
A glide reflection symmetry (in 3D: a glide plane symmetry) means that a reflection
in a line or plane combined with a translation along the line / in the plane, results in the same object. It implies
translational symmetry with twice the translation vector.
The symmetry group is isomorphic with Z.
Rotoreflection symmetry
In 3D, rotoreflection or improper rotation in the strict sense is rotation about an
axis, combined with reflection in a plane perpendicular to that axis. As symmetry groups with regard to a roto-reflection we can
distinguish:
- the angle has no common divisor with 360°, the symmetry group is not discrete
- 2n-fold rotoreflection (angle of 180°/n) with symmetry group S2n of order 2n (not to
be confused with symmetric groups, for which the same notation is used; abstract group
C2n); a special case is n=1, inversion, because it does not depend on
the axis and the plane, it is characterized by just the point of inversion.
- Cnh (angle of 360°/n); for odd n this is generated by a single symmetry, and the abstract
group is C2n, for even n this is not a basic symmetry but a combination. See also point groups in three dimensions.
Helical symmetry
A drill bit with helical symmetry.
- See also screw axis.
Helical symmetry is the kind of symmetry seen in such everyday objects as springs, Slinky toys, drill bits, and
augers. It can be thought of as rotational symmetry along with translation along the axis of
rotation, the screw axis). The concept of helical symmetry can be visualized as the tracing
in three-dimensional space that results from rotating an object at an even angular
speed while simultaneously moving at another even speed along its axis of rotation (translation). At any one point in
time, these two motions combine to give a coiling angle that helps define the properties of the tracing. When the tracing
object rotates quickly and translates slowly, the coiling angle will be close to 0°. Conversely, if the rotation is slow and the
translation speedy, the coiling angle will approach 90°.
Three main classes of helical symmetry can be distinguished based on the interplay of the angle of coiling and translation
symmetries along the axis:
- Infinite helical symmetry. If there are no distinguishing features along the length of a helix or helix-like object, the object will have infinite symmetry much like that of a circle, but with the
additional requirement of translation along the long axis of the object to return it to its original appearance. A helix-like
object is one that has at every point the regular angle of coiling of a helix, but which can also have a cross section of indefinitely high complexity, provided only that precisely the same cross
section exists (usually after a rotation) at every point along the length of the object. Simple examples include evenly coiled
springs, slinkies, drill
bits, and augers. Stated more precisely, an object has infinite helical symmetries if for
any small rotation of the object around its central axis there exists a point nearby (the translation distance) on that axis at
which the object will appear exactly as it did before. It is this infinite helical symmetry that gives rise to the curious
illusion of movement along the length of an auger or screw bit that is being rotated. It also provides the mechanically useful
ability of such devices to move materials along their length, provided that they are combined with a force such as gravity or
friction that allows the materials to resist simply rotating along with the drill or auger.
- n-fold helical symmetry. If the requirement that every cross section of the helical object be identical is relaxed,
additional lesser helical symmetries become possible. For example, the cross section of the helical object may change, but still
repeats itself in a regular fashion along the axis of the helical object. Consequently, objects of this type will exhibit a
symmetry after a rotation by some fixed angle θ and a translation by some fixed distance, but will
not in general be invariant for any rotation angle. If the angle (rotation) at which the symmetry occurs divides evenly into a
full circle (360°), the result is the helical equivalent of a regular polygon. This case is called n-fold helical
symmetry, where n = 360°/θ, see e.g. double helix.
This concept can be further generalized to include cases where mθ is a multiple of
360°—that is, the cycle does eventually repeat, but only after more than one full rotation of the helical object.
- Non-repeating helical symmetry. This is the case in which the angle of rotation θ
required to observe the symmetry is an irrational number such as
radians that
never repeats exactly no matter how many times the helix is rotated. Such symmetries are created by using a non-repeating
point group in two dimensions. DNA is an example of this type
of non-repeating helical symmetry.
Scale symmetry and fractals
Scale symmetry refers to the idea that if an object is expanded or reduced in size, the new object has the same properties as
the original. Scale symmetry is notable for the fact that it does not exist for most physical systems, a point that was
first discerned by Galileo. Simple examples of the lack of scale symmetry in
the physical world include the difference in the strength and size of the legs of elephants
versus mice, and the observation that if a candle made of soft wax was enlarged to the size of a
tall tree, it would immediately collapse under its own weight.
A more subtle form of scale symmetry is demonstrated by fractals. As conceived by
Mandelbrot, fractals are a mathematical concept in which the structure of a complex
form looks exactly the same no matter what degree of magnification is used to examine it.
A coast is an example of a naturally occurring fractal, since it retains roughly comparable and
similar-appearing complexity at every level from the view of a satellite to a microscopic examination of how the water laps up
against individual grains of sand. The branching of trees, which enables children to use small twigs as stand-ins for full trees
in dioramas, is another example.
This similarity to naturally occurring phenomena provides fractals with an everyday familiarity not typically seen with
mathematically generated functions. As a consequence, they can produce strikingly beautiful results such as the Mandelbrot set. Intriguingly, fractals have also found a place in CG, or
computer-generated movie effects, where their ability to create very complex curves with fractal symmetries results in more
realistic virtual worlds.
Symmetry combinations
See symmetry combinations.
Symmetry in science and technology
Symmetry in physics
-
Symmetry in physics has been generalized to mean invariance—that is,
lack of any visible change—under any kind of transformation. This concept has become one of the most powerful tools of
theoretical physics, as it has become evident that practically all laws of nature originate in symmetries. See Noether's theorem (which, as a gross oversimplification, states that for every mathematical symmetry,
there is a corresponding conserved quantity; a conserved current, in Noether's original language); and also, Wigner's classification, which says that the symmetries of the laws of physics determine the
properties of the particles found in nature.
Symmetry in physical objects
Classical objects
Although an everyday object may appear exactly the same after a symmetry operation such as a rotation or an exchange of two
identical parts has been performed on it, it is readily apparent that such a symmetry is true only as an approximation for any
ordinary physical object.
For example, if one rotates a precisely machined aluminum equilateral triangle
120 degrees around its center, a casual observer brought in before and after the rotation will be unable to decide whether or not
such a rotation took place. However, the reality is that each corner of a triangle will always appear unique when examined with
sufficient precision. An observer armed with sufficiently detailed measuring equipment such as optical or electron microscopes will not be fooled; she
will immediately recognize that the object has been rotated by looking for details such as crystals or minor deformities.
Such simple thought experiments show that assertions of symmetry in everyday
physical objects are always a matter of approximate similarity rather than of precise mathematical sameness. The most important
consequence of this approximate nature of symmetries in everyday physical objects is that such symmetries have minimal or no
impacts on the physics of such objects. Consequently, only the deeper symmetries of space
and time play a major role in classical physics—that is, the
physics of large, everyday objects.
Quantum objects
Remarkably, there exists a realm of physics for which mathematical assertions of simple symmetries in real objects cease to be
approximations. That is the domain of quantum physics, which for the most part is the
physics of very small, very simple objects such as electrons, protons, light, and atoms.
Unlike everyday objects, objects such as electrons have very limited numbers of
configurations, called states, in which they can exist. This means that when symmetry
operations such as exchanging the positions of components are applied to them, the resulting new configurations often cannot be
distinguished from the originals no matter how diligent an observer is. Consequently, for
sufficiently small and simple objects the generic mathematical symmetry assertion F(x) = x ceases to be approximate, and
instead becomes an experimentally precise and accurate description of the situation in the real world.
Consequences of quantum symmetry
While it makes sense that symmetries could become exact when applied to very simple objects, the immediate intuition is that
such a detail should not affect the physics of such objects in any significant way. This is in part because it is very difficult
to view the concept of exact similarity as physically meaningful. Our mental picture of such situations is invariably the same
one we use for large objects: We picture objects or configurations that are very, very similar, but for which if we could "look
closer" we would still be able to tell the difference.
However, the assumption that exact symmetries in very small objects should not make any difference in their physics was
discovered in the early 1900s to be spectacularly incorrect. The situation was succinctly summarized by Richard Feynman in the direct transcripts of his Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume III, Section 3.4, Identical particles.
(Unfortunately, the quote was edited out of the printed version of the same lecture.)
- "... if there is a physical situation in which it is impossible to tell which way it happened, it always interferes;
it never fails."
The word "interferes" in this context is a quick way of saying that such objects
fall under the rules of quantum mechanics, in which they behave more like
waves that interfere than like everyday large objects.
In short, when an object becomes so simple that a symmetry assertion of the form F(x) = x becomes an exact statement of
experimentally verifiable sameness, x ceases to follow the rules of classical physics and must instead be modeled using the more complex—and often far less
intuitive—rules of quantum physics.
This transition also provides an important insight into why the mathematics of symmetry are so deeply intertwined with those
of quantum mechanics. When physical systems make the transition from symmetries that are approximate to ones that are exact, the
mathematical expressions of those symmetries cease to be approximations and are transformed into precise definitions of the
underlying nature of the objects. From that point on, the correlation of such objects to their mathematical descriptions becomes
so close that it is difficult to separate the two.
Symmetry as a unifying principle of geometry
The German geometer Felix Klein enunciated a very influential Erlangen programme in 1872, suggesting symmetry as unifying and organising principle in geometry (at a
time when that was read 'geometries'). This is a broad rather than deep principle. Initially it led to interest in the
groups attached to geometries, and the slogan transformation geometry (an aspect of the New Math, but hardly
controversial in modern mathematical practice). By now it has been applied in numerous forms, as kind of standard attack on
problems.
Symmetry in mathematics
-
An example of a mathematical expression exhibiting symmetry is a2c + 3ab +
b2c. If a and b are exchanged, the expression remains unchanged due to the
commutativity of addition and multiplication.
Like in geometry, for the terms there are two possibilities:
- it is itself symmetric
- it has one or more other terms symmetric with it, in accordance with the symmetry kind
See also symmetric function, duality
(mathematics)
Symmetry in logic
A dyadic relation R is symmetric if and only if, whenever it's true that
Rab, it's true that Rba. Thus, “is the same age as” is symmetrical, for if Paul is the same age as Mary, then Mary
is the same age as Paul.
Symmetric binary logical connectives are "and" (∧,
, or &), "or" (∨), "biconditional" (iff) (↔), NAND ("not-and"), XOR ("not-biconditional"), and NOR ("not-or").
Generalizations of symmetry
If we have a given set of objects with some structure, then it is possible for a symmetry to merely convert only one object
into another, instead of acting upon all possible objects simultaneously. This requires a generalization from the concept of
symmetry group to that of a groupoid.
Physicists have come up with other directions of generalization, such as supersymmetry
and quantum groups.
Symmetry in biology
See symmetry (biology) and facial symmetry.
Symmetry in chemistry
-
Symmetry is important to chemistry because it explains observations in spectroscopy, quantum chemistry and crystallography. It draws heavily on group theory.
Symmetry in telecommunications
Some telecommunications services (specifically data products) may be referred to as symmetrical or asymmetrical.
This refers to the bandwidth allocated for data sent and received. Most internet services used by residential customers are
asymmetrical: the data sent to the server normally is far less than that returned by the server.
Symmetry in history, religion, and culture
In any human endeavor for which an impressive visual result is part of the desired objective, symmetries play a profound role.
The innate appeal of symmetry can be found in our reactions to happening across highly symmetrical natural objects, such as
precisely formed crystals or beautifully spiraled seashells. Our first reaction in finding such an object often is to wonder
whether we have found an object created by a fellow human, followed quickly by surprise that the symmetries that caught out
attention are derived from nature itself. In both reactions we give away our inclination to view symmetries both as beautiful
and, in some fashion, informative of the world around us.
Symmetry in religious symbols
The tendency of people to see purpose in symmetry suggests at least one reason why symmetries are often an integral part of
the symbols of world religions. Just a few of many examples include the sixfold rotational
symmetry of Judaism's Star of David, the twofold
point symmetry of Taoism's Taijitu or Yin-Yang, the bilateral symmetry of Christianity's cross and Sikhism's
Khanda, or the fourfold point symmetry of Jain's ancient (and peacefully intended) version of the swastika. With its
strong prohibitions against the use of representational images, Islam, and in particular
the Sunni branch of Islam, has developed some of the most intricate and visually impressive
use of symmetries for decorative uses of any major religion.
The ancient Taijitu image of Taoism is a particularly
fascinating use of symmetry around a central point, combined with black-and-white inversion of color at opposite distances from
that central point. The image, which is often misunderstood in the Western world as
representing good (white) versus evil (black), is actually intended as a graphical representative of the complementary need for
two abstract concepts of "maleness" (white) and "femaleness" (black). The symmetry of the symbol in this case is used not just to
create a symbol that catches the attention of the eye, but to make a significant statement about the philosophical beliefs of the
people and groups that use it. Also an important symmetrical religious symbol is the Shintoist "Torii" "The gate of the birds",
usually the gate of the Shintoist temples called "Jinjas".
Symmetry in Social Interactions
People observe the symmetrical nature, often including asymmetrical balance, of social interactions in a variety of contexts.
These include assessments of reciprocity, empathy, apology, dialog, respect, justice, and revenge. Symmetrical interactions send
the message "we are all the same" while asymmetrical interactions send the message "I am special; better than you". Peer
relationships are based on symmetry, power relationships are based on asymmetry. [7]
Symmetry in architecture
Another human endeavor in which the visual result plays a vital part in the overall result is architecture. Both in ancient times, the ability of a large structure to impress or even intimidate its
viewers has often been a major part of its purpose, and the use of symmetry is an inescapable aspect of how to accomplish such
goals.
Just a few examples of ancient examples of architectures that made powerful use of symmetry to impress those around them
included the Egyptian Pyramids, the Greek Parthenon, and the first and second Temple of Jerusalem, China's Forbidden City,
Cambodia's Angkor Wat complex, and the many temples and
pyramids of ancient Pre-Columbian civilizations. More recent historical examples of
architectures emphasizing symmetries include Gothic architecture cathedrals, and
American President Thomas Jefferson's
Monticello home. India's unparalleled Taj Mahal is in a category by itself, as it may arguably be one of the most impressive and beautiful uses of
symmetry in architecture that the world has ever seen.
An interesting example of a broken symmetry in architecture is the Leaning Tower of Pisa, whose notoriety stems in no small part not for the intended symmetry of its
design, but for the violation of that symmetry from the lean that developed while it was still under construction. Modern
examples of architectures that make impressive or complex use of various symmetries include Australia's astonishing Sydney Opera House and Houston, Texas's simpler Astrodome.
Symmetry finds its ways into architecture at every scale, from the overall external views, through the layout of the
individual floor plans, and down to the design of individual building elements such as
intricately caved doors, stained glass windows, tile
mosaics, friezes, stairwells, stair rails, and balustradess. For sheer complexity and sophistication in the exploitation of symmetry as an architectural
element, Islamic buildings such as the Taj Mahal often eclipse those of other cultures and
ages, due in part to the general prohibition of Islam against using images or people or animals.
Links related to symmetry in architecture include:
Symmetry in pottery and metal vessels
Persian vessel (4th millennium B.C.)
Since the earliest uses of pottery wheels to help shape clay vessels, pottery has had
a strong relationship to symmetry. As a minimum, pottery created using a wheel necessarily begins with full rotational symmetry
in its cross-section, while allowing substantial freedom of shape in the vertical direction. Upon this inherently symmetrical
starting point cultures from ancient times have tended to add further patterns that tend to exploit or in many cases reduce the
original full rotational symmetry to a point where some specific visual objective is achieved. For example, Persian pottery dating from the fourth millennium B.C. and earlier used symmetric zigzags, squares,
cross-hatchings, and repetitions of figures to produce more complex and visually striking overall designs.
Cast metal vessels lacked the inherent rotational symmetry of wheel-made pottery, but otherwise provided a similar opportunity
to decorate their surfaces with patterns pleasing to those who used them. The ancient Chinese, for example, used symmetrical patterns in their bronze castings as early as the 17th century
B.C. Bronze vessels exhibited both a bilateral main motif and a repetitive translated border design.
Links:
Symmetry in quilts
Kitchen Kaleidoscope Block
As quilts are made from square blocks (usually 9, 16, or 25 pieces to a block) with each
smaller piece usually consisting of fabric triangles, the craft lends itself readily to the application of symmetry.
Links:
Symmetry in carpets and rugs
A long tradition of the use of symmetry in carpet and rug
patterns spans a variety of cultures. American Navajo Indians used bold diagonals and
rectangular motifs. Many Oriental rugs have intricate reflected centers and borders that
translate a pattern. Not surprisingly, rectangular rugs typically use quadrilateral symmetry—that is, motifs that are reflected across both the horizontal and vertical axes.
Links:
Symmetry in music
Symmetry is of course not restricted to the visual arts. Its role in the history of music
touches many aspect of the creation and perception of music.
Musical form
Symmetry has been used as a formal constraint by many composers, such as the
arch form (ABCBA) used by Steve Reich, Béla Bartók, and James Tenney (or swell). In classical music, Bach
used the symmetry concepts of permutation and invariance; see (external link "Fugue No. 21," pdf or Shockwave).
Pitch structures
Symmetry is also an important consideration in the formation of scales and
chords, traditional or tonal music being made up of
non-symmetrical groups of pitches, such as the diatonic
scale or the major chord. Symmetrical scales or chords, such as the whole tone scale, augmented chord, or diminished
seventh chord (diminished-diminished seventh), are said to lack direction or a sense of
forward motion, are ambiguous as to the key or tonal
center, and have a less specific diatonic functionality. However, composers such as
Alban Berg, Béla Bartók, and George Perle have used axes of symmetry and/or interval cycles in
an analogous way to keys or non-tonal tonal
centers.
Perle (1992) explains "C-E, D-F#, [and] Eb-G, are different instances of the same interval...the other kind of identity. ..has to do with axes of symmetry. C-E belongs to a family of
symmetrically related dyads as follows:"
| D |
|
D# |
|
E |
|
F |
|
F# |
|
G |
|
G# |
| D |
|
C# |
|
C |
|
B |
|
A# |
|
A |
|
G# |
Thus in addition to being part of the interval-4 family, C-E is also a part of the sum-4 family (with C equal to 0).
| + |
2 |
|
3 |
|
4 |
|
5 |
|
6 |
|
7 |
|
8 |
| 2 |
|
1 |
|
0 |
|
11 |
|
10 |
|
9 |
|
8 |
| 4 |
|
4 |
|
4 |
|
4 |
|
4 |
|
4 |
|
4 |
Interval cycles are symmetrical and thus non-diatonic. However, a seven pitch segment of C5 (the cycle of fifths, which are
enharmonic with the cycle of fourths) will produce the diatonic major scale. Cyclic tonal
progressions in the works of Romantic
composers such as Gustav Mahler and Richard Wagner
form a link with the cyclic pitch successions in the atonal music of Modernists such as Bartók, Alexander Scriabin, Edgard Varèse, and the Vienna school. At
the same time, these progressions signal the end of tonality.
The first extended composition consistently based on symmetrical pitch relations was probably Alban Berg's Quartet, Op.
3 (1910). (Perle, 1990)
Equivalency
Tone rows or pitch class sets which are invariant under retrograde are horizontally symmetrical, under inversion
vertically. See also Asymmetric rhythm.
Symmetry in other arts and crafts
Celtic knotwork
The concept of symmetry is applied to the design of objects of all shapes and sizes. Other examples include beadwork, furniture, sand paintings,
knotwork, masks, musical
instruments, and many other endeavors.
Symmetry in aesthetics
-
The relationship of symmetry to aesthetics is complex. Certain simple symmetries, and in
particular bilateral symmetry, seem to be deeply ingrained in the inherent perception
by humans of the likely health or fitness of other living creatures, as can be seen by the simple experiment of distorting one
side of the image of an attractive face and asking viewers to rate the attractiveness of the resulting image. Consequently, such
symmetries that mimic biology tend to have an innate appeal that in turn drives a powerful tendency to create artifacts with
similar symmetry. One only needs to imagine the difficulty in trying to market a highly asymmetrical car or truck to general automotive buyers to understand the power of
biologically inspired symmetries such as bilateral symmetry.
Another more subtle appeal of symmetry is that of simplicity, which in turn has an implication of safety, security, and
familiarity. A highly symmetrical room, for example, is unavoidably also a room in which anything out of place or potentially
threatening can be identified easily and quickly. People who have, for example, grown up in houses full of exact right angles and
precisely identical artifacts can find their first experience in staying in a room with no exact right angles and
no exactly identical artifacts to be highly disquieting. Symmetry thus can be a source of comfort not only as an indicator
of biological health, but also of a safe and well-understood living environment.
Opposed to this is the tendency for excessive symmetry to be perceived as boring or uninteresting. Humans in particular have a
powerful desire to exploit new opportunities or explore new possibilities, and an excessive degree of symmetry can convey a lack
of such opportunities.
Yet another possibility is that when symmetries become too complex or too challenging, the human mind has a tendency to "tune
them out" and perceive them in yet another fashion: as noise that conveys no useful
information.
Finally, perceptions and appreciation of symmetries are also dependent on cultural background. The far greater use of complex
geometric symmetries in many Islamic cultures, for example, makes it more likely that
people from such cultures will appreciate such art forms (or, conversely, to rebel against them).
As in many human endeavors, the result of the confluence of many such factors is that effective use of symmetry in art and
architecture is complex, intuitive, and highly dependent on the skills of the individuals who must weave and combine such factors
within their own creative work. Along with texture, color, proportion, and other factors, symmetry is a powerful ingredient in
any such synthesis; one only need to examine the Taj Mahal to powerful role that symmetry
plays in determining the aesthetic appeal of an object.
A few examples of the more explicit use of symmetries in art can be found in the remarkable art of M. C. Escher, the creative design of the mathematical concept of a wallpaper group, and the many applications (both mathematical and real world) of tiling.
Symmetry in games and puzzles
- See also symmetric games.
Board games
Symmetry in literature
See palindrome.
Moral symmetry
See also
References
- Livio, Mario (2005). The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of
Symmetry. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-5820-7.
- Perle, George (1990). The Listening Composer, p. 112. California: University of
California Press. ISBN 0-520-06991-9.
- Perle, George (1992). Symmetry, the Twelve-Tone Scale, and Tonality. Contemporary Music Review 6 (2), pp. 81-96.
- Rosen, Joe, 1995. Symmetry in Science: An Introduction to the General Theory. Springer-Verlag.
- Weyl, Hermann (1952). Symmetry. Princeton University Press. ISBN
0-691-02374-3.
- Hahn, Werner (1998). Symmetry As A Developmental Principle In Nature And Art World Scientific. ISBN 981-02-2363-3.
- Symmetry: Culture and
Science, published by Symmetrion, Budapest. ISSN 0865-4824.
- Darvas, György (2007). Symmetry,
Basel-Berlin-Boston: Birkhäuser
Verlag, xi + 508 p.
Notes
- ^ Weyl, Hermann (1989). Symmetry. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691023743.
- ^ (Wey 1989)
- ^ For example, Aristotle ascribed
spherical shape to the heavenly bodies, attributing this formally-defined geometric measure of symmetry to the natural order and
perfection of the cosmos.
- ^ For example, operations such as moving across a regularly patterned tile
floor or rotating an eight-sided vase, or complex transformations of equations or in the way music
is played.
- ^ See e.g., Mainzer, Klaus (2005). Symmetry And Complexity: The Spirit and Beauty of Nonlinear Science.
World Scientific. ISBN 9812561927.
- ^ Symmetric objects can be material, such as a person, crystal, quilt, floor tiles, or