Coin Rotation Paradox

by aoum, Mar 14, 2025, 8:16 PM

The Coin Rotation Paradox: A Surprising Geometric Mystery

The Coin Rotation Paradox is a fascinating puzzle in geometry that reveals an unexpected result when one coin rotates around another of the same size. Intuition suggests the coin should rotate once, but in reality, it rotates twice. This paradox is a great example of how geometry and motion can defy our expectations.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f6/COINview.png/220px-COINview.png

1. What Is the Coin Rotation Paradox?

Imagine two identical coins lying flat on a surface. If you keep one coin stationary and roll the other around it without slipping, how many times will the moving coin rotate when it completes a full circle around the stationary coin?

Surprisingly, the moving coin completes two full rotations—not one!

2. Understanding the Paradox

At first glance, it seems like the moving coin should rotate once because it travels a distance equal to its own circumference. However, an additional rotation occurs due to the coin also turning relative to the center of the stationary coin.

This additional twist happens because while the coin rolls along the circumference, it also rotates due to the circular path it follows.

3. Mathematical Explanation of the Coin Rotation Paradox

To understand this paradox mathematically, consider the following:
  • Let the radius of both coins be \( r \).
  • The circumference of each coin is:

    \[
C = 2 \pi r
\]
  • When the moving coin rolls around the stationary coin, it travels a total distance equal to the circumference of the stationary coin, which is also \( 2 \pi r \).
  • As the moving coin rolls without slipping, it completes one full rotation during this motion.

However, the center of the moving coin also travels in a circular path around the stationary coin. This circular motion contributes an additional full rotation, leading to two complete rotations by the time it returns to its starting point.

4. Visualizing the Motion

To break the motion into two parts:
  • Rolling Rotation: The moving coin rotates once as it rolls along the stationary coin’s circumference.
  • Orbital Rotation: As the moving coin’s center moves around the stationary coin, it adds another full rotation relative to its own axis.

Both these effects combine to give the surprising result of two full rotations.

5. Generalizing the Coin Rotation Paradox

If the rolling coin has a radius \( r \) and the stationary circle has a radius \( R \), the number of rotations of the moving coin is given by:

\[
\text{Rotations} = 1 + \frac{R}{r}.
\]
For two identical coins (\( R = r \)):

\[
\text{Rotations} = 1 + 1 = 2.
\]
If the stationary circle is larger, the rolling coin will rotate more times according to this formula.

6. Real-World Examples of the Coin Rotation Paradox

This paradox isn’t limited to math puzzles—variations of it appear in the real world:
  • Gears and Cogs: When one gear rotates around another, the moving gear experiences both rolling and orbital motion.
  • Planetary Motion: The Moon rotates exactly once per orbit around the Earth, a phenomenon known as synchronous rotation.
  • Car Tires: A tire rolling around another of the same size experiences the same doubling effect.

7. Exploring the Paradox with a Thought Experiment

Imagine a coin rolling along a straight path. It completes one rotation for each length of its circumference. Now curve that path into a circle while keeping the same rolling motion. The coin still rotates due to the path length, but it also turns relative to the circle’s center—causing the second rotation.

8. Simulating the Coin Rotation Paradox with Python

You can simulate the motion using Python to visualize and verify the rotations:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

# Parameters
r = 1
theta = np.linspace(0, 2 * np.pi, 300)

# Fixed coin
fixed_x = r * np.cos(theta)
fixed_y = r * np.sin(theta)

# Moving coin path
moving_x = 2 * r * np.cos(theta) + r * np.cos(2 * theta)
moving_y = 2 * r * np.sin(theta) + r * np.sin(2 * theta)

# Plotting the motion
plt.plot(fixed_x, fixed_y, label="Stationary Coin")
plt.plot(moving_x, moving_y, label="Rolling Coin Path")
plt.axis("equal")
plt.legend()
plt.title("Coin Rotation Paradox")
plt.show()


9. Fun Facts About the Coin Rotation Paradox
  • This paradox is an example of kinematics—the study of motion without considering forces.
  • Similar principles explain why gears with the same number of teeth rotate in opposite directions but complete two rotations when revolving around each other.
  • The paradox highlights the difference between linear and angular motion.
  • It is related to the epicycloid, a curve traced by a point on a circle rolling around another circle.

10. Applications of the Coin Rotation Paradox

This paradox has practical implications in various areas:
  • Engineering: Understanding gear mechanics and rotational systems.
  • Astronomy: Explaining the motion of celestial bodies with rotational coupling.
  • Animation and Graphics: Simulating rolling motion in computer graphics.
  • Education: Demonstrating surprising results in elementary mechanics.

11. Conclusion

The Coin Rotation Paradox is a beautiful demonstration of how geometry and motion can challenge our intuition. While it seems like a rolling coin should complete one rotation, the combined effects of linear and circular motion result in two full rotations. This surprising fact underlies many real-world phenomena and continues to fascinate mathematicians and engineers alike.

References

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  • Thanks! I'm happy to hear that! How is the new CSS? If you don't like it, I can go back.

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  • This is such a cool blog! Just a suggestion, but I feel like it would look a bit better if the entries were wider. They're really skinny right now, which makes the posts seem a lot longer.

    by Catcumber, Apr 4, 2025, 11:16 PM

  • The first few posts for April are out!

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  • Sure! I understand that it would be quite a bit to take in.

    by aoum, Apr 1, 2025, 11:08 PM

  • No, but it is a lot to take in. Also, could you do the Gamma Function next?

    by HacheB2031, Apr 1, 2025, 3:04 AM

  • Am I going too fast? Would you like me to slow down?

    by aoum, Mar 31, 2025, 11:34 PM

  • Seriously, how do you make these so fast???

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  • I am now able to make clickable images in my posts! :)

    by aoum, Mar 29, 2025, 10:42 PM

  • Am I doing enough? Are you all expecting more from me?

    by aoum, Mar 29, 2025, 12:31 AM

  • That's all right.

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  • sorry i couldn't contribute, was working on my own blog and was sick, i'll try to contribute more

    by HacheB2031, Mar 28, 2025, 2:41 AM

  • Nice blog!
    I found it through blogroll.

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