Geometry of an Egg: Is Bottom Half a Hemisphere?

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    Egg Geometry
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around whether the bottom half of an egg can be classified as a hemisphere. Participants explore the definitions and perceptions of the halves of an egg, questioning the intuitive understanding of egg orientation and geometry.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that the bottom half of an egg is intuitive and commonly understood to be the bottom, particularly in reference to chicken eggs.
  • Others challenge this assumption, questioning the clarity of defining the top and bottom halves of an egg and suggesting that different types of eggs may complicate the discussion.
  • A participant mentions that an egg's natural orientation is stable on its side, which may contradict the idea of a definitive top and bottom.
  • One participant references external sources suggesting that the bottom half may not be a full hemisphere, indicating a potential discrepancy in geometric definitions.
  • Another participant introduces an interesting observation about the behavior of a hard-boiled egg when spun, relating it to angular momentum.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on whether the bottom half of an egg is a hemisphere, with multiple competing views and uncertainties remaining regarding the definitions and perceptions of egg halves.

Contextual Notes

There are limitations in the discussion regarding the assumptions about egg types and their geometrical properties, as well as the lack of clarity in the definitions of "top" and "bottom" in relation to different contexts.

Ontophile
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Is the bottom half of an egg a hemisphere?
 
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Do eggs have a top half and a bottom half? If so which is which? What sort of eggs are you referring to?
 
I'm sorry. I thought it was rather intuitive which half of an egg is the top and which is the bottom. Whenever an egg is drawn or otherwise depicted, it is almost always oriented the same way, and so I'm having trouble believing that there is any real confusion here. Besides, my question immediately suggests which half I'm talking about, since only one half is even possibly a candidate for being a hemisphere. Furthermore, most English speakers are referring to a chicken egg whenever the type of egg that they're talking about isn't specified. The rigor you seem to require is superfluous. Your confusion isn't real, it's forced or performed, just for the sake of being difficult. No matter; someone reasonable will come along soon and answer my question.
 
Ontophile said:
I'm sorry. I thought it was rather intuitive which half of an egg is the top and which is the bottom. Whenever an egg is drawn or otherwise depicted, it is almost always oriented the same way, and so I'm having trouble believing that there is any real confusion here. Besides, my question immediately suggests which half I'm talking about, since only one half is even possibly a candidate for being a hemisphere. Furthermore, most English speakers are referring to a chicken egg whenever the type of egg that they're talking about isn't specified. The rigor you seem to require is superfluous. Your confusion isn't real, it's forced or performed, just for the sake of being difficult. No matter; someone reasonable will come along soon and answer my question.

No. It is not. It has bumps.
 
Ontophile said:
Whenever an egg is drawn or otherwise depicted, it is almost always oriented the same way, and so I'm having trouble believing that there is any real confusion here.

Really? Look at the pictures on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_egg.

The natural orientation for an egg is in stable equilibrium on its side, not standing on one whichever end you think is the bottom.

But let's not restart the Big-Endian and Little-Endian disputes in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lilliput_and_Blefuscu. :smile:
 
Ontophile said:
I'm sorry. I thought it was rather intuitive which half of an egg is the top and which is the bottom. Whenever an egg is drawn or otherwise depicted, it is almost always oriented the same way, and so I'm having trouble believing that there is any real confusion here. Besides, my question immediately suggests which half I'm talking about, since only one half is even possibly a candidate for being a hemisphere. Furthermore, most English speakers are referring to a chicken egg whenever the type of egg that they're talking about isn't specified. The rigor you seem to require is superfluous. Your confusion isn't real, it's forced or performed, just for the sake of being difficult. No matter; someone reasonable will come along soon and answer my question.

It was correct of me to ask for clarification. When I read your question I imagined that you were doing some sort of project and different types of eggs popped into my mind, birds eggs, insect eggs, human eggs, fish eggs etc.
 
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The following link has a pretty nice summary. It suggests the answer is YES.

http://www.mi.sanu.ac.rs/vismath/rojas/index.html

However according to this picture from wiki, neither end of an ovoid is usually a full hemisphere. I don't know if these geometric versions of an egg shape really correspond to a birds egg.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Owal_by_Zureks.svg

Also did you know that if you spin a hard boiled egg fairly fast on its side on a flat surface, it will sit up on its fat end? I guess that's to minimise its angular momentum, but it never ceases to amaze me.
 

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