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Encyclopedia > Alignments of random points

Image of leyline simulation
80 4-point near-alignments of 137 random points

Statistics shows that if you put a large number of random points on a bounded flat surface you can find many alignments of random points. Some people think that this can be used to prove that ley lines exist due to chance alone (as opposed to supernatural or anthropological explanations). Image File history File links 80 4-point ley lines pass through 137 random points File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Statistics is a type of data analysis whose practice includes the planning, summarizing, and interpreting of observations of a system possibly followed by predicting or forecasting of future events based on a mathematical model of the system being observed. ... In ordinary language, the word random is used to express apparent lack of purpose or cause. ... Ley lines are alignments of a number of places of geographical interest, such as ancient megaliths. ...


One precise definition which expresses the generally accepted meaning of "alignment" as:

a set of points, chosen from a given set of landmark points, all of which lie within at least one straight path of a given width w

"Straight path of width w" may be defined as the set of all points within a distance of w/2 of a straight line on a plane, or a great circle on a sphere, or in general any geodesic on any other kind of manifold. Note that, in general, any given set of points that are aligned in this way will contain an uncountable number of infinitesimally different straight paths. Therefore, only the existence of at least one straight path is necessary to determine whether a set of points is an alignment. For this reason, it is easier to count the sets of points, rather than the paths themselves. A line, or straight line, is, roughly speaking, an (infinitely) thin, (infinitely) long, straight geometrical object, i. ... A great circle on a sphere A great circle is a circle on the surface of a sphere that has the same diameter as the sphere, dividing the sphere into two equal hemispheres. ... In mathematics, a geodesic is a generalization of the notion of a straight line to curved spaces. ... This is the current mathematics collaboration of the week! Please help improve it to featured article standard at manifold/rewrite. ... In mathematics the term countable set is used to describe the size of a set, e. ...


The width w is important: it allows the fact that real-world features are not mathematical points, and that their positions need not line up exactly for them to be considered in alignment.


For example, using a 1mm pencil line to draw alignments on an 1:50,000 Ordnance Survey map, a suitable value of w would be 50m. Image produced from the Ordnance Survey Get-a-map service. ...

Contents


An estimate of the probability of alignments existing by chance

Statistically, finding alignments on a landscape gets progressively easier as the area to be considered increases. One way of understanding this phenomenon is to see that the increase in the number of possible combinations of points in that area overwhelms the decrease in the probability that any given set of points in that area line up. In combinatorial mathematics, a combination of members of a set is a subset. ...


The number of alignments found is very sensitive to the allowed width w, increasing approximately proportionately to wk-2, where k is the number of points in an alignment.


For those interested in the mathematics, the following is a very approximate order-of-magnitude estimate of the likelihood of alignments, assuming a plane covered with uniformly distributed "significant" points.


Consider a set of n points in a compact area with approximate diameter d and area approximately d². Consider a valid line to be one where every point is within distance w/2 of the line (that is, lies on a track of width w, where w << d).


Consider all the unordered sets of k points from the n points, of which there are

frac {n!} {(n-k)!k!}.

What is the probability that any given set of points is co-linear in this way? Let us very roughly consider the line between the "leftmost" and "rightmost" two points of the k selected points (for some arbitrary left/right axis: we can choose top and bottom for the exceptional vertical case). These two points are by definition on this line. For each of the remaining k-2 points, the probability that the point is "near enough" to the line is roughly w/d, which can be seen by considering the ratio of the area of the line tolerance zone (roughly wd) and the overall area (roughly d²).


So, the expected number of k-point alignments, by this definition, is very roughly

frac {n!} {(n-k)!k!} left({frac{w}{d}}right)^{k-2}.

For n >> k this is approximately

frac {n^k} {k!} left({frac{w}{d}}right)^{k-2}.

Now assume that area is equal to d2, and say there is a density α of points such that n = αd2.


Then we have the expected number of lines equal to:

frac {alpha^k d^{2k}} {k!} left( {frac{w}{d}} right)^{k-2}

and an area density of k-point lines of:

frac 1 {d^2} frac {alpha^k d^{2k}} {k!} left( {frac{w}{d}} right)^{k-2}.

Gathering the terms in k we have an areal density of k-point lines of:

d^k frac {alpha^k} {k!} w^{k-2}.

Thus, contrary to intuition, the number of k-point lines expected from random chance increases much more than linearly with the size of the area considered.


Computer simulation of alignments

Image of ley line simulation
607 4-point alignments of 269 random points

Computer simulations show that points on a plane tend to form alignments similar to those found by ley hunters in numbers consistent with the order-of-magnitude estimates above, suggesting that ley lines may also be generated by chance. This phenomenon occurs regardless of whether the points are generated pseudo-randomly by computer, or from data sets of mundane features such as pizza restaurants. Image File history File links 607 leylines through 269 random points, created by me File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... A computer simulation or a computer model is a computer program which attempts to simulate an abstract model of a particular system. ...


It is easy to find alignments of 4 to 8 points in reasonably small data sets with w = 50m. Choosing large areas or larger values of w makes it easy to find alignments of 20 or more points.


The simulation used alignments crossing long distances and alignments of two points close together and the third a long distance away. Allowing only lines of close points would radically alter this picture.


See also

Ley lines are alignments of a number of places of geographical interest, such as ancient megaliths. ...

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Ley Lines and Computing (3586 words)
Watkins hypothesized that ley lines were the sighting points for a vast network of "straight tracks" that covered prehistoric England, and his book includes several crossroads used as ley points and instances of dirt pathways uncovered in the course of sewer excavation (Watkins 1948:38-39).
His 200 random point run found that 752 three-point, 33 four-point and 2 five-point ley lines existed by chance alone, and suggested that Watkins' criterion of a five-point ley being almost impossible was unrealistic for large collections of points.
The Hough array I used was 1000 by 1000, and the x and y values of random points were uniformly distributed between -.5 and +.5 units; thus r varied from -.5 û2 to +.5 û2.
ley line: Information from Answers.com (2806 words)
Regarding the trade-route theories, skeptics point out that straight lines do not make ideal roads in all circumstances, particularly where they ignore topography and require users to march up and down hills or mountains, or to cross rivers at points where there is no portage or bridge.
The existence of the observed alignments is not controversial.
Most skeptics believe that their null hypothesis of ley-line-like alignments as due to random chance is consistent with the evidence.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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