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The Great Britain Guide

Public art & sculpture · London

Witch of Agnesi

Free admission

Witch of Agnesi in England London, United Kingdom.

Houses on Halfway Street - geograph.org.uk - 1560575

Stephen Craven — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1 h–2 h
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Witch of Agnesi is a public sculpture in England London, United Kingdom, dating from 1959. Britain's public art ranges from Henry Moore reclining figures and Anthony Gormley installations to the Angel of the North and the surviving statues of empire.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

In mathematics, the witch of Agnesi (Italian pronunciation: [aɲˈɲeːzi, -eːsi; -ɛːzi]) is a cubic plane curve defined from two diametrically opposite points of a circle. The curve was studied as early as 1653 by Pierre de Fermat, in 1703 by Guido Grandi, and by Isaac Newton. It gets its name from Italian mathematician Maria Gaetana Agnesi who published it in 1748. The Italian name la versiera di Agnesi is based on Latin versoria (sheet of sailing ships) and the sinus versus. This was read by John Colson as l'avversiera di Agnesi, where avversiera is translated as "woman who is against God" and interpreted as "witch". The graph of the derivative of the arctangent function forms an example of the witch of Agnesi. As the probability density function of the Cauchy distribution, the witch of Agnesi has applications in probability theory. It also gives rise to Runge's phenomenon in the approximation of functions by polynomials, has been used to approximate the energy distribution of spectral lines, and models the shape of hills. The witch is tangent to its defining circle at one of the two defining points, and asymptotic to the tangent line to the circle at the other point. It has a unique vertex (a point of extreme curvature) at the point of tangency with its defining circle, which is also its osculating circle at that point. It also has two finite inflection points and one infinite inflection point. The area between the witch and its asymptotic line is four times the area of the defining circle, and the volume of revolution of the curve around its defining line is twice the volume of the torus of revolution of its defining circle.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

Architecture

To construct this curve, start with any two points O and M, and draw a circle with OM as diameter. For any other point A on the circle, let N be the point of intersection of the secant line OA and the tangent line at M. Let P be the point of intersection of a line perpendicular to OM through A, and a line parallel to OM through N. Then P lies on the witch of Agnesi. The witch consists of all the points P that can be constructed in this way from the same choice of O and M. It includes, as a limiting case, the point M itself.

Visiting

The Witch of Agnesi is the title of a novel by Robert Spiller. It includes a scene in which a teacher gives a version of the history of the term. Witch of Agnesi is also the title of a music album by jazz quartet Radius. The cover of the album features an image of the construction of the witch.

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
51.4465, 0.0788
District
Greenwich
Parish
Greenwich, unparished area
Postcode
SE9 2EW
Parliamentary constituency
Eltham and Chislehurst
Established
1959

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Witch of Agnesi?
Witch of Agnesi is in London, United Kingdom (postcode SE9 2EW), in the parish of Greenwich, unparished area.
When was Witch of Agnesi built?
Built or established in 1959.
Is Witch of Agnesi free to visit?
Yes, Witch of Agnesi is free to enter.
How do I get to Witch of Agnesi?
Drivers can navigate to postcode SE9 2EW. It sits within the Eltham and Chislehurst parliamentary constituency.