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  • So you're tired of symmetry being all about reflections and rotations or the most boring

  • of all: translations, which is just like, puttin stuff places.

  • Puttin stuff places.

  • It's math!

  • It's funny becauseputtin stuff placesis your english translation of the word translation

  • so to translate "translate" you metatranslate, just like how when you have data about data

  • that's metadata or in science if you do a study on a set of studies its a metastudy

  • or if you dream that you're dreaming it's dream-ception.

  • Anyway so you're really into this word Metachirality which you figure has gotta mean, like, chirality

  • that itself has chirality cuz maybe that is a thing?

  • But if chiral means something is not the same as its mirror image, what does it mean for

  • something to not be the same as its mirror image in a not-the-same-as-its-mirror-image

  • kind of way?

  • I mean in school they made you learn about just four kinds of symmetry transformation

  • thing: reflection, rotation, good ol' translation, and everyone's least favourite symmetry,

  • the glide reflection.

  • Well maybe they're not that bad, but you've always been a little suspicious of them, y'know?

  • Are they one thing?

  • Or are they two things?

  • How can you be both a reflection and a translation without being two things or is the whole point

  • that puttin stuff places all flippy-like is its own special thing?

  • And then you wonder why do you never hear about other combinations?

  • So you try putting a reflection and a rotation together, which you name a reflectotation.

  • And a reflectotation is definitely different from either a reflection or a rotation alone.

  • Although you notice the reflectotation looks an awful lot like a glide reflection which

  • is interesting because, ooh, you can make a diagram, see there's reflections and rotations

  • and translations and we can make sure we get all combinations, like a glide reflection

  • is a reflection translation, and between reflection and rotation is our reflectotation which is

  • a glide reflection, or maybe a glide reflection is a reflectotation?

  • Anyway they're the same, so what about a glide rotation?

  • It can't just be another one that's the same as glide reflection because it never

  • flips, both feet are the same chirality.

  • but it lookswell, you think maybe you could get that with just one rotation from

  • a different spot, yeah, so the glide's not doin much for ya except moving the rotation

  • point.

  • And what do you get when you translate, reflect, and rotate?

  • Just another glide reflection?

  • Well you guess there's just only one way to put stuff places all flippy-like so unfortunately

  • those combinations don't get you anything new, it's still four kinds of thing whatever

  • you call them, and what you want is a new kind of transformation that will put some

  • chirality in your chirality.

  • Of course this assumes it's always true that these combinations get you a rotation

  • or glide reflection.

  • It certainly seems like a rotation plus translation will always just move the rotation point around

  • on the planeit seems like you can take any two left feet anywhere on the plane and

  • there will be a single rotation between them.

  • Anywhere on the plane.

  • Unlesswhat if you're not on the plane?

  • What if we travel into the third dimension?

  • But wait”, says 2-dimensional you.

  • Isn't the third dimension time?”

  • Maybe sometimes but we'll make time for time another time.

  • Anyway so you take your thing and rotated thing and instead of translating it along

  • the plane you bring it out into the third dimension.

  • Well that wasn't very dramatic.

  • And now we have to get it to stay there

  • There you go, and why not do it again, and again and again until it comes back around,

  • and seen from the top it's like if it were flat it would have 72-degree rotational symmetry

  • but in 3d it doesn't, it's like... a spiral staircase that climbs itself.

  • cuz its feetum anyway so you decide to keep adding to it because it's turning into

  • a spirally sort of thing and you like spirals, you were born to like spirals, it's in your

  • DNA.

  • And you like it because this 3d glide rotation is definitely not one of the old four kinds

  • of transformation, it's something new, and it looks like an actual symmetry: that every

  • time you transform this whole thing by a 72-degree rotation plus a little translation, it stays

  • the same.

  • Well, if you pretend its infinite.

  • But infinity is totally your bestie so you got this.

  • So you're feeling pretty good about discovering this new kind of symmetry until you find out

  • that not only does it already have a name but you even already discovered that name

  • back when you were first forced to learn about symmetry in math class and said: screw symmetry.

  • Screw symmetry, y'know that translating rotating feeling like screwing a screw, except to be

  • a proper symmetry it's an infinite screw so when you do the translation and rotation

  • thing it doesn't go past its own edge or get to the end.

  • Its spirally like a spring or like that swirly pasta but only if you pretend its an infininoodle

  • which it is coming out of the noodle machine before they cut it up to fit it in a box,

  • right?

  • And now that you think of it there's a lot of spirally helix things out there and unlike

  • your foot staircase most of them have this smooth continuous symmetry like, y'know

  • the barber pole effect, which you figure happens because things with screw symmetry look the

  • same if you turn it a little and move it forward a little at the same time, until you realize

  • your drill bit isn't infinite but anyway if you only turn it without moving forward

  • then under symmetry its like its moving backwards a little.

  • You wonder if it would look like it were barberpoling the other way if you turned the drill bit

  • around around, and strangely enough it still barberpole effects back towards the drill,

  • and the symmetry still wants you to move forward and clockwise.

  • It looks the same when turned around, which you notice is the case for a lot of these

  • things, which means they have 2-way rotational symmetry, which explains why, like, a nut

  • turns clockwise onto a screw but if you flip the nut over then itstill turns clockwise

  • onto the screw.

  • That's different from like, if you have a clockwise pointing arrow and you flip it

  • over now it's a counterclockwise pointing arrow.

  • A thing turning in place looks clockwise from one side and counterclockwise from the other.

  • Even your helixy things that look a little different when turned around, like this swirlynoodle

  • which has a direction to its flappybits, like petting a cat, but pasta.

  • It still has clockwise screw symmetry whether its moving head first or tail first.

  • Good kitty.

  • Your springs, on the other hand, all have counterclockwise screw symmetry.

  • You notice it's like the spiral of your spiral notebook, but that one's right handed.

  • They're like mirror images kinda.

  • Which reminds you of how when you have a chiral thing with 72 degree rotational symmetry to

  • the right, the mirror image also has 72 degree rotational symmetry to the right, even though

  • the reflection of the symmetry is a 72 degree rotation to the left.

  • Or to look at it a different way, if the original has symmetry 72-degrees to the right it also

  • has the mirror image symmetry of 72-degrees to the left, which is another way of saying

  • its the same symmetry.

  • The figure might not be the same as its mirror image, left foots turn to right foots or whatever,

  • but there's only one kind of 72-degree rotational symmetry because it's the same as its mirror

  • image symmetry.

  • Well hold on now, normal chiral rotational symmetry is the same symmetry as its mirror

  • image?

  • That soundsnot very chiral.

  • Wouldn't it be more chiral if a chiral symmetry were not the same as its mirror image?

  • That sounds meta.

  • That soundsmetachiral.

  • So you take another look at your spirally helix things.

  • The screw symmetry has you move your screw a little bit forward with a right-hand twist.

  • But mirror screws don't let you move a bit forward with a right hand twist, you need

  • to use forward and left.

  • Well that's not so complicated, right?

  • One spirally foot thing has a right handed 72-degree screw symmetry, and its mirror image

  • doesn't have a right handed 72-degree screw symmetry.

  • The symmetry has its own chiral partner, a left handed 72-degree screw symmetry.

  • Yeah, some kinds of chiral symmetry come in chiral pairs.

  • That's metachirality.

  • You didn't even need the fourth dimension or some fancy crystal lattice!

  • You've been eating metachirality all along!

  • It's been in your candy canes and telephone cords and slinkys!

  • Sure maybe its useful if you're trying to understand crystal lattices or wanna know

  • which way 'round spacetime goes but its been all around you this whole time but only

  • now can you recognize the fundamental difference between a pastakitty and springfingers.

  • It's this season's fashion!

  • Ok maybe its time to end this videojust gonnado that now.

  • bye.

So you're tired of symmetry being all about reflections and rotations or the most boring

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