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I love the book Proofs Without Words by Roger B. Nelsen. One of the proofs I liked the most was this: Area under one arch of a cycloid is 3 times the area of the wheel that traces it. You break the cycloid in to three parts and show that each part has an area equal to that of the wheel.

I have always wondered if there is a similar proof for why the surface area of a sphere is equal to the area of a circle with radius twice that of the sphere. Is there a nice way to see this?

I would also like to know if one can show without doing any calculus that the length of the arch of the cycloid is 8 times the radius of the wheel. (Note: $\pi$ does not show up here, so this sounds tricky!)

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  • $\begingroup$ This question is off topic for this site, but why not look for some of these proofs yourself? $\endgroup$ Nov 18, 2012 at 23:59
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    $\begingroup$ @Anthony, I think this is on topic. The standard proofs do not convey the level of direct geometric insight which the OP desires. A large number of mathematicians (myself included) treasure these kinds of proofs, and I think it is reasonable to ask for one here. There was a very successful question asking for proofs without words, but neither of these appear as answers. $\endgroup$ Nov 19, 2012 at 0:24
  • $\begingroup$ I remember this from a while ago, not sure if the methods will satisfy you: johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2010/10/11/geometry-puzzle $\endgroup$ Nov 19, 2012 at 0:37
  • $\begingroup$ I do think this question is off topic, even if other might be that are not closed. $\endgroup$ Nov 19, 2012 at 20:22

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It seems that you are more or less asking for a proof-without-words of Archimedes's theorem equating the area on a sphere between two horizontal slices with the area of the circumscribed cylinder between the same two slices. But this is a notoriously non-obvious theorem, so I'll be very surprised if such a proof exists.

Here's why I say that proving the $4\pi r^2$ formula is more or less the same as proving Archimedes's theorem: The theorem is clearly approximately true for a very thin slice symmetric around the equator. As you move from the equator to a pole, taking slices of equal width, it would be at least mildly suprising if the corresponding spherical surface areas did not change monotonically. If they decrease, then the total area of the sphere is less than that of the cylinder; if they increase, then the total area of the sphere is more than that of the cylinder. So (at least given the expectation of monotonicity), having them all equal (i.e. the full strength of Archimedes's theorm) is equivalent to the sphere having the same surface areas as the cylinder, which in turn is clearly $4\pi r^2$.

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  • $\begingroup$ That's a whole lot of words for a proof-without-words. $\endgroup$ Nov 19, 2012 at 1:36
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    $\begingroup$ @Ryan - he is arguing that he doesn't think there is such a proof. $\endgroup$ Nov 19, 2012 at 5:16
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$$\frac{dy}{ds} = \frac{r}{R} \ \implies \ 2 \pi r \cdot ds =2 \pi R \cdot dy$$

I was recently watching through 3 Blue 1 Brown videos, and learned that he did this argument, and also a second proof.

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I will describe in words a proof which might as well be illustrated without words (I would provide it in such visual form instead had I only the skills to make diagrams any nicer than MS Paint scrawls):

Imagine a sphere as the Earth, oriented in the usual way with the North pole on top. [This makes no difference except to my linguistic convenience, of course]

Consider an infinitesimal "square" patch of the Earth's surface, whose sides are oriented along lattitudinal and longitudinal lines, and the distortion this square undergoes when projected horizontally outward to the cylinder circumscribing the Earth (with the polar axis as its axis).

The ratio of the square's horizontal distance from the polar axis to the radius of the Earth is equal to the ratio of the square's vertical span to the length of its longitudinally oriented sides. (These are both the cosine of the angle between the square's position and the equator (equivalently, the angle between the square's orientation and vertical)).

Accordingly, the factor by which the square's lattitudinally oriented sides are stretched in our cylindrical projection is equal to the factor by which its longitudinally oriented sides are squashed.

Thus, our cylindrical projection is area-preserving, from which we have that the area of the entire sphere is the same as the side area of its circumscribing cylinder.

This, it seems to me, is a perfectly "directly geometric" account of the desired fact.

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  • $\begingroup$ I like your proof. The proof for area under a cycloid also required some simple geometrical calculations which I am willing to still consider as a "proof without words". It is still intriguing though that it is not easy to find a natural proof mapping the area of a circle with twice the radius of the sphere to the surface area of the sphere. $\endgroup$ Nov 20, 2012 at 1:48