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The Galton board, also known as a quincunx or bean machine, is a device for statistical experiments named after
English scientist Sir Francis Galton. It consists of an upright board with evenly spaced nails (or pegs) driven into its
About MathWorld upper half, where the nails are arranged in staggered order, and a lower half divided into a number of evenly-spaced
Contribute to MathWorld rectangular slots. The front of the device is covered with a glass cover to allow viewing of both nails and slots. In the
middle of the upper edge, there is a funnel into which balls can be poured, where the diameter of the balls must be
Send a Message to the Team much smaller than the distance between the nails. The funnel is located precisely above the central nail of the second
row so that each ball, if perfectly centered, would fall vertically and directly onto the uppermost point of this nail's
MathWorld Book surface (Kozlov and Mitrofanova 2002). The figure above shows a variant of the board in which only the nails that can
potentially be hit by a ball dropped from the funnel are included, leading to a triangular array instead of a rectangular
one.
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Each time a ball hits one of the nails, it can bounce right (or left) with some probability (and ). For
13,683 entries
Last updated: Mon Feb 11 2019 symmetrically placed nails, balls will bounce left or right with equal probability, so . If the rows are
numbered from 0 to , the path of each falling ball is a Bernoulli trial consisting of steps. Each ball crosses the
Created, developed, and bottom row hitting the th peg from the left (where ) iff it has taken exactly right turns, which occurs
nurtured by Eric Weisstein
at Wolfram Research with probability

This process therefore gives rise to a binomial distribution of in the heights of heaps of balls in the lower slots.

If the number of balls is sufficiently large and , then according to the weak law of large numbers, the
distribution of the heights of the ball heaps will approximate a normal distribution.

Some care is needed to obtain these idealized results, however, as the actual distribution of balls depends on physical
properties of the setup, including the elasticity of the balls (as characterized by their coefficient of restitution), the
radius of the nails, and the offsets of the balls over the funnel's opening when they are dropped (Kozlov and
Mitrofanova 2002).

SEE ALSO:
Binomial Distribution, Normal Distribution, Random Walk

Portions of this entry contributed by Margherita Barile

REFERENCES:
Chepelianskii, A. D. and Shepelyansky, D. L. Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 034101-1, 2001.
Galton, F. Natural Inheritance. New York: Macmillan, 1894.
"Galton's Board or Quincunx." http://www.stattucino.com/berrie/dsl/Galton.html.
Hoover, W. G. In Microscopic Simulations of Complex Hydrodynamic Phenomena (Ed. M. Mareschal and B. L. Holian). New York:
Plenum, 1992.
Hoover, W. G. and Moran, B. Phys. Rev. A 40, 5319, 1989.
Kozlov, V. V. and Mitrofanova, M. Yu. "Galton Board." Regular Chaotic Dynamics 8, 431-439, 2002.
Kumič, K. In Unsolved Problems of Noise and Fluctuations: UPoN'99: Second International Conference, Adelaide, Australia 11-15
July 1999 (Ed. D. Abbott and L. B. Kish). Melville: American Institute of Physics, 2000.
Lue, A. and Brenner, H. Phys. Rev. E 47, 3128, 1993.
Moran, B. and Hoover, W. G. J. Stat. Phys. 48, 709, 1987.
Physics at Davidson. "Galton Board." http://webphysics.davidson.edu/Applets/galton4/galton_mean.html.
University of Alabama in Huntsville. "The Galton Board Experiment."
http://www.math.uah.edu/stat/applets/GaltonBoardExperiment.xhtml.

Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha: Galton Board

CITE THIS AS:


Barile, Margherita and Weisstein, Eric W. "Galton Board." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GaltonBoard.html

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