Golden ratio discovered in uterus
Belgian gynaecologist measures
reproductive organs of 5,000 women and finds that the most fertile have
'mathematically perfect' dimensions
Source: Guardian.co.uk
The golden ratio is a scientific nugget
that has, for at least two thousand years, belonged as much to mysticism
as to mathematics.
It is just a number – 1.618 – but to its
devotees the ratio expresses aesthetic perfection, and can be found
wherever there is beauty.
For example, they argue that of all the
rectangles in the world the most pleasing to the eye has a ratio of
length to width of 1.618.
And of all the smiles in the world, they
maintain that the most beautiful have their central incisors 1.618
wider than their lateral incisors, which are 1.618 wider than their
canines, and so on down through the molars.
There are web pages devoted to where
else on the human face you can find the golden ratio, which is also
known as the golden section, golden proportion or golden mean.
It is undeniable that 1.618 can be found quite easily on the human form.
For example, if you mark the tips of the
knuckles on your finger with a pen, the distance between first and
second knuckle is about 1.618 times the distance between the second and
the third.
The reason I can say this is because I
have tried it out using a "golden claw", a pair of three-pronged
callipers that always open such that the ratio between the prongs is
1.618.
All the claims about the golden ratio in
humans come from considering our exteriors, which is why recently I was
fascinated to hear from Jasper Verguts, a gynaecologist at the
University Hospital Leuven in Belgium, who has tried to find out if the
ratio also appears internally.
Dr Verguts told me that gynaecologists
can instantly tell whether a uterus looks normal or not based on its
relative dimensions, and his hunch was that these dimensions
approximated the golden ratio.
Over the last few months he has measured
the uteruses of 5,000 women using ultrasound and drawn up a table of
the average ratio of a uterus's length to its width for different age
bands.
The data shows that this ratio is about 2
at birth and then it steadily decreases through a woman's life to 1.46
when she is in old age.
Dr Verguts was thrilled to discover that
when women are at their most fertile, between the ages of 16 and 20,
the ratio of length to width of a uterus is 1.6 – a very good
approximation to the golden ratio.
"This is the first time anyone has looked at this, so I am pleased it turned out so nicely," he said.
Interest in the golden ratio would have
no scientific value were it not for the fact that the number has bona
fide mathematical credentials.
The ratio was not plucked from thin air.
It arises from the Fibonacci sequence, the sequence of numbers starting
0,1 such that every term is the sum of the previous two:
0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, …
The ratio of consecutive terms of the
Fibonacci sequence converges to 1.618. For example 8/5 = 1.6 and a few
terms down the line 89/55 = 1.618.
Since the Fibonacci sequence grows by
adding on to itself in an organic way, it has been argued that one
should expect to see Fibonacci numbers and the ratios between them in
living forms.
Looking for the golden ratio in nature, in fact, is a hobby for many.
And none more so than the celebrated
recreational mathematician Caspar Schwabe, who has gone one better than
the traditional three-pronged "golden claw" and made a four-pronged
one.
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