Thursday, March 21, 2013

Bat Country: A Sierpinski Tetrahedron Jungle Gym

The mathematical sculpture that we made 6 years ago, Bat Country, has been selected as one of the 2013 Burning Man Honorarium Art Projects!  This will be the third time we will have brought the full sculpture to Burning Man.  We are honored in being selected given the number of art grant submissions this year.  Thanks to all who have participated in building Bat Country.
Bat Country is 21’ tall six-sided tetrahedron built from 384 aluminum baseball bats and 130 twelve-inch softballs.  The bats form the structure’s edges; there is one softball at each vertex.
Each edge of the structure measures 26’ in distance.
The structure is designed to be and intended to be climbed upon; ½” threaded steel rod runs through the axis of each bat.  These rods bolt to steel joining plates at each vertex.  This provides structural stability and facilitate transportation and on-site assembly.
The total structure weighs about 2500 lbs.  We placed a blue LED behind each of the 130 softballs. 
Here you can see Bat Country at an art car party at night.
A propane fireball really lights it up.
Mathematically, Bat Country is an example of a third-generation Sierpinski tetrahedron. Waclaw Sierpinski was a 20th century Polish mathematician who pioneered the field of fractal geometry; one of the two-dimensional fractals he described was the Sierpinski triangle. His triangle was one of the first shapes understood to demonstrate self-similarity: the property that its shape at any level is the same as its shape at its largest level. The Sierpinski tetrahedron is a three-dimensional shape realizing the same concept – a tetrahedron is a pyramid with a triangular base.

Bat Country represents the idea of self similarity; the full-scale installation is an assembly of 64 small tetrahedrons. To understand the Sierpinski tetrahedron, consider one tetrahedron, made with six bats, one for each edge, and four balls, one at each corner. With four such tetrahedrons you can assemble a first-generation Sierpinski tetrahedron (requiring 6x4 = 24 bats). If you combine four first-generation tetrahedrons, you get a second-generation tetrahedron (requiring 24x4 = 96 bats). If you combine four of these in turn, you get a third-generation tetrahedron (requiring 96x4 = 384 bats).  This is Bat Country, a third-generation Sierpinski tetrahedron.
It has 1 jumbo tetrahedron, the whole sculpture.  It has 4 large tetrahedrons, with 4 bats on each edge.  It has 4^2 = 16 medium tetrahedrons with 2 bats on each edge.  It has 4^3 = 64 small tetrahedrons made from 6 bats.

In all, there are 1 + 4 + 16 + 64 =  85 tetrahedrons across the 4 sizes.

The negative space between each tetrahedron forms a regular octahedron with eight triangular faces. The largest octahedron, in the center of the sculpture, is about 10’ high. This space, large enough for several people to stand in, serves as an inhabitable ‘room’ inside Bat Country. Self-similarly, four smaller octahedrons, one at the center of each second-generation tetrahedron, are each about 5’ high; there are also sixteen small octahedrons, one inside each of the first-generation tetrahedrons.
So far, we have assembled the full structure three times: The first time was a test build in South San Francisco, and the other two times were at Burning Man 2008 and 2009.

We build it from the bottom up.  It takes a lot of wrenches and hands to work them because this sculpture goes together with a whole lot of bolts.  There is a bolt on both ends of each bat, and 8 more that join 2 steel connectors together where the balls are.  2 x 384 + 8 x 127 = 1784 bolts. 

First we build the bottom layer with 3^4 = 81 bats.  
Then we add another 81 bats to make 27 little tetrahedrons.
Eventually, we get nine first generation Seirpinski tetrahedrons...
... and three second generation Siepinski tetrahedrons.  Then, we erect a scaffold and build the top quadrant on top of the other three.
This is the hard part.
The last bit goes up quickly.
This is some of our campmates and crew. 
This is Bat Country on the night of the Burn in 2009.
In 2010, we brought a quarter of Bat Country to the Playa to pitch at our camp.  I made some shade panels for it like this, and I plan on making a few more this year.  The panels not only provide shade, but make it more visible from a distance.

This is Paul Brown.  He is Bat Country's engineer.
Paul is also my partner.  Here we are together, Paul and me.
 This is me building Bat Country.
Bat Country was originally modeled after my 3 inch tall, beaded Sierpinski tetrahedrons like these.





Thanks for looking!

6 comments:

  1. Oh how I love your post! You're one of my favorite bead-nerds!

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    1. Thank you Cath. Having nerds like you to nerd out with makes it twice the fun!

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  2. I read this last night. First, congratulations. Second, I really enjoyed this post- it was an informative window into matters I do not usually give much thought to, but mostly it was fun.

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  3. A mathematician who beads - I love that! It makes sense since there's patterns in beading with set numbers of different components that can be changed around just like plugging in different values in formulas (or is it formulae). I bet you have a knack for music too. Many mathematicians do.

    I found your blog by following a link to learn how to do Super-RAW. I definitely want to try it. Had to further check out your blog and found this! I remember doing the Sierpinski triangle on my graphing calculator. But to see it 3-dimensional and SO big! Wow! While I love math, to do it well, everything else has to 'disappear'. I can only focus on math with absolutely no distractions. It takes a completely different mindset for me - almost like doing a 180. I envy people like you (and my so) - how you do it as naturally as breathing or walking. Still, I can enjoy the fractal patterns all about in nature. :)

    Jude

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    1. Hey Jude (I couldn't resist). Thank you so much for your kind comments. In fact, I'm not very musical, although I often wish I were.

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