Consider an empty spherical bowl of radius $r$. I was trying to find the height to which I would need to fill the bowl with water so that it would be one quarter full (in terms of volume).
The total volume is $\frac{4}{3}\pi r^3$ and the volume filled be water up to a height $h$ is $\pi r h^2 - \frac{1}{3}\pi h^3$. For the bowl to be one quarter full (in terms of volume), $h$ needs to satisfy $h^3 - 3rh^2 + r^3 = 0$.
I couldn't solve this by hand and so used Maple, expecting only a numerical solution. Astonishingly, Maple was able to give two beautiful solutions. The positive one is such that $$ \color{blue}{\frac{h}{r} = \sqrt{3}\sin\frac{\pi}{9}-\cos\frac{\pi}{9}+1}$$
I've tried making the substitution $h = \rho\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta}$ into $h^3 - 3rh^2 + r^3 = 0$ and then equating real and imaginary parts. Taking the imaginary parts gives $4\rho\cos^2\theta - 6r\cos\theta - \rho = 0$. This seemed promising, but solving doesn't give anything useful.
I can see that the solution could have been found by solving a general cubic and then simplifying the ghastly expressions by applying de Moivre's formula.
- Is there an elegant and simple way of arriving at the result by hand?
- Under what conditions are such nice solutions possible?