The sounds of Pi

Ever wonder what Pi would sound like if it were played on musical instruments?  Well, here it is … the musical interpretation of Pi to 31 decimal places or 3.1415926535897932384626433832795.  I always knew that mathematics was visually beautiful, but I never imaged how beautiful it could sound.  Just breathtaking!  (Thanks to the musician Michael John Blake for taking the time to create it and to my colleague for finding the link for me.)

Click here to enjoy:  http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/nstv/2011/03/a-musical-interpretation-of-pi.html

I wonder what the number e would sound like?

The World’s Hardest Easy Geometry Problem

Every once in a while a math problem takes the world by storm … at least the world of nerds.  About five years ago, the “World’s Hardest Easy Geometry Problem” hit the internet.  Not that this problem was new or unique.  After all, it has been around for hundreds of years.  However, with the speed and ease of communication of the internet, the problem spread like wildfire.  In fact, according to rumors, the problem was so addictive that the whiteboards in the offices of Google were filled with attempted solutions.  As the story goes, one employee said that the problem probably cost Google about a quarter of a million dollars in lost time.

What was the problem that people couldn’t stop thinking about?  Think you can solve it?  Enjoy … and no cheating!  (For a PDF version of the problem, click World’s Hardest Easy Geometry Problem.)

 

A theorem a day in the New Year

Looking for that perfect New Year’s resolution?  Looking for something that will be both informative and fun to do each day?  I give you the best resolution ever – reading about a different theorem every day in the New Year!

Below is a great website that publishes a different theorem each day for you to read and enjoy.  Honestly, can you think of anything better to do with your time?  That’s more of a rhetorical question as we all know the answer is NO!

To get started, just click on the website:  http://www.theoremoftheday.org/index.php.  Happy New Year!

One “long” multiplication problem

Frank Nelson Cole

Here’s a simple question for you – What are the factors of 147,573,952,589,676,412,927?  Impossible?  Well, before you run off and find your calculator, would it help to mention that someone found its factors using only a pencil and paper?  It’s true.  On October 31, 1903, Frank Cole did just that.  He factored the number 147,573,952,589,676,412,927 – with just a pencil and paper!

What makes the story so legendary is the way Cole revealed the factors.  At a meeting of the American Mathematical Society, Cole presented his paper titled “On the factoring of large numbers.”  Usually, when a mathematician presents a paper, he or she stands on a stage in front of a blackboard, lecturing to the audience about the particular topic of their paper.  However, Cole’s lecture was different.  He did not speak a single word.  He simply went to the board, and began to calculate.  On one side of the board, he calculated 267 – 1 = 147,573,952,589,676,412,927 by hand.  Then he went to the other side of the board and worked out the product of 193,707,721 and 761,838,257,287, the factors of 147,573,952,589,676,412,927.  After spending the silent hour working out the calculations, Cole simply turned around and went back to his seat, completely silent!  The audience erupted into a standing ovation.  Talk about making a dramatic presentation!  Later, when asked how long it took him to find the factors, he responded by saying “three years of Sundays.”

So, why would anyone in their right mind take the time to factor such a big number you ask?  Why this one?  Why the number 267 – 1?  It turns out that this number is related to something known as Mersenne Primes.  First popularized by the French monk Marin Mersenne, primes of this form are generated using the formula 2p − 1 (where p is prime).  For example:  if p = 2, then 2– 1 = 3 or if p = 5, then 2– 1 = 31.  And, as you know, both 5 and 31 are prime numbers.

I know what you are thinking – I thought it was impossible to have a formula that generates primes.  Well, yes and no.  While there is no formula that will generate ALL prime numbers, there are many formulas that generate some primes.  Unfortunately, as with all prime formulas, even this formula doesn’t always work.  For example, if p = 11, then 211 – 1 = 2047.  2047 is a composite number with factors 23 and 89.

So, why bother with a formula that inconsistently generates primes?  Well, mathematicians are fun people.  And, like most people, they are attracted to big things – like big prime numbers.  Since this formula can generate some pretty massive numbers, the potential for monstrous size prime numbers exists.  And, what’s better than massive prime numbers?  Nothing!  In fact, some mathematicians are so obsessed with really big primes that they have started an internet search for big primes called GIMPS –  the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search.  If you go to this website, you can download a program to help out with the search!  To date, there have been 47 Mersenne Primes discovered.  The biggest, discovered on April 12, 2011, is a 12,837,064 digit number.  (Click here to see the number.)

Like many of the massive numbers generated by Mersenne’s formula, 267 – 1 had the potential to be prime.  However, no one was sure because there are no effective techniques for factoring large numbers.  Finally, in 1876, Edouard Lucas made the first breakthrough by proving that this number could not be prime.  However, he was unable to find its factors.  Well, there is no greater enticement to a mathematician than a good mystery.  So, the search began.  And, thanks to Frank Cole, the mystery was solved on October 31, 1903.

For someone like me, a triumph like this, in the age of technology, should be celebrated!  Well done!

The 100 Greatest Theorems of Mathematics

As a mathematics teacher, I am often asked what I believe is the single greatest theorem in all of mathematics.  And, depending on my mood, I could claim any one of a dozen theorems to be the greatest.  Talk to other math people and you will probably get a completely different dozen.  In fact, there are probably as many different opinions as there are theorems.  To me that is one of the beautiful things of my subject.

With that being said, I guess there is no point in anyone ever trying to construct a list, right?  Not really. Enter mathematicians Jack and Paul Abad.   In 1999, they set forth on the arduous journey of generating the list of the 100 Greatest Theorems.  In making the list, they used 3 criteria.

  • the place the theorem holds in literature
  • the quality of the proof
  • the unexpectedness of the result

What did they come up with?  Below is their top 12.  For the complete list, click here.

  1. The Irrationality of the Square Root of 2 by Pythagoras (500 B.C.)
  2. Fundamental Theorem of Algebra by Karl Frederich Gauss (1799)
  3. The Denumerability of the Rational Numbers by Georg Cantor (1867)
  4. Pythagorean Theorem by Pythagoras (500 B.C.)
  5. Prime Number Theorem by Jacques Hadamard and Charles-Jean de la Vallee Poussin – separately (1896)
  6. Godel’s Incompleteness Theorem by Kurt Godel (1931)
  7. Law of Quadratic Reciprocity by Karl Frederich Gauss (1801)
  8. The Impossibility of Trisecting the Angle and Doubling the Cube by Pierre Wantzel (1837)
  9. The Area of a Circle by Archimedes (225 B.C.)
  10. Euler’s Generalization of Fermat’s Little Theorem by Leonhard Euler (1760)
  11. The Infinitude of Primes by Euclid (300 B.C.)
  12. The Independence of the Parallel Postulate by Karl Frederich GaussJanos BolyaiNikolai LobachevskyG.F. Bernhard Riemann – collectively (1870-1880)

What do you think?  Did they get it right?  Enjoy the debate!