What is the Shortest Path for a Spider to Capture a Fly on a Cube?

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  • Thread starter Ackbach
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    2015
In summary, spiders use their webs to capture flies on a cube. They strategically place their webs in areas where flies are likely to fly, and can capture flies on any surface of the cube as long as they have a suitable surface to build their webs on. Spiders do not have a predetermined path for capturing flies, but use their instincts to find the most efficient path to reach the fly. They can also capture flies on a three-dimensional cube by using their ability to spin webs in multiple directions.
  • #1
Ackbach
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Here is this week's POTW:

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A spider at corner $S$ of a cube of side length $1$ inch wishes to capture a fly at the opposite corner $F$. The spider, who must walk on the surface of the solid cube, wishes to find the shortest path.
  • Find a shortest path with the aid of calculus.
  • Find a shortest path without calculus.
Choose the spider's starting point as the origin, and let the fly be at the corner $(1,1,1)$ inches.

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  • #2
No one answered this week's POTW. What follows is my solution.

First, we use calculus. There are six faces to the cube: $x=0, x=1, y=0, y=1, z=0,$ and $z=1$. I will use each of these equations to represent the face lying in the plane described by that equation. Construct the straight line from the origin to $(1,1,1)$. By symmetry, we may rotate the cube about this line $2\pi/3$ radians, and obtain the same situation as before. We may also reflect the cube about the plane $y=x$, and obtain the same situation as before. This means we may restrict our attention to two faces - arbitrarily I choose the $y=0$ and $z=1$ faces, and only paths on those faces. It seems reasonable to assume that the shortest path desired would be a straight segment from the origin to some point on the edge in common between these two planes, and then another straight segment from that point to $(1,1,1)$. To find the desired point $(x,0,1)$, we represent the distance from the origin to that point as $d_1=\sqrt{x^2+1}$, and then the distance from that point to $(1,1,1)$ would be $d_2=\sqrt{(1-x)^2+1}=\sqrt{x^2-2x+2}$. The total distance, therefore, is given by
$$d=\sqrt{x^2+1}+\sqrt{x^2-2x+2}.$$
Differentiating and setting the result equal to zero results in
$$\frac{x}{\sqrt{x^2+1}}+\frac{x-1}{\sqrt{x^2-2x+2}}=0 \quad \implies \quad
\frac{x^2}{x^2+1}=\frac{x^2-2x+1}{x^2-2x+2}.$$
Here we must be careful - we may have introduced extraneous solutions by squaring. Cross-multiplying yields
\begin{align*}
x^4-2x^3+2x^2&=x^4+x^2-2x^3-2x+x^2+1 \\
0&=-2x+1 \\
x&=\frac12.
\end{align*}
So, then, the solution is to reach the midpoint of an adjoining cube edge, and then to go directly to the opposite corner.

Without calculus, we could simply argue by symmetry that this must be the solution. There is a symmetry from the first half of the journey to the second half (you could think of path reversal), so that they should be symmetric. This leads to the same answer.
 

1. What is the shortest path for a spider to capture a fly on a cube?

The shortest path for a spider to capture a fly on a cube is the path that requires the least amount of movement for the spider to reach the fly.

2. How do spiders capture flies on a cube?

Spiders use their webs to capture flies on a cube. They strategically place their webs in areas where flies are likely to fly, such as near light sources or near food sources.

3. Can spiders capture flies on any surface of a cube?

Yes, spiders can capture flies on any surface of a cube as long as they have a suitable surface to build their webs on. However, they may have to adjust their web-building techniques based on the surface of the cube.

4. Do spiders have a predetermined path for capturing flies on a cube?

No, spiders do not have a predetermined path for capturing flies on a cube. They use their instincts and adapt to the environment to find the most efficient path to reach the fly.

5. Can spiders capture flies on a three-dimensional cube?

Yes, spiders can capture flies on a three-dimensional cube. They use their ability to spin webs in multiple directions to navigate and capture flies on different surfaces of the cube.

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