Column Entries
Julie Rehmeyer
Math Trek
by Julie Rehmeyer
RSS

  arrow_dash_leftleft
Results
of 445
right  
  • access
    For fans of major-league baseball, one of the highlights of the current season is the rate at which Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants is hitting home runs.Through June 25, Bonds has hit 39 home runs in 77 games, already setting the record for the most home runs before the all-star break in mid-July. At this rate, he could slug 82 homers by the time the 162-game season ends. That number would easily surpass the record-setting 70 home runs that Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals hit in 1998.The popular statistics journal known as The Sporting News has gone even further in its trend an...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Predicting the geometric shapes of soap bubble clusters can lead to surprisingly difficult mathematical problems.Frank Morgan of Williams College in Williamstown, Mass., recently illustrated such difficulties when he invited an audience of mathematicians, students, and others to vote on which one of a given pair of different representations of the same number of clustered planar bubbles would have a smaller total perimeter. Assembled for a ceremony at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., to honor the 12 winners of the 2001 U.S.A. Mathematical Olympiad (USAMO), audience members...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Predicting the geometric shapes of soap bubble clusters can lead to surprisingly difficult mathematical problems.Frank Morgan of Williams College in Williamstown, Mass., recently illustrated such difficulties when he invited an audience of mathematicians, students, and others to vote on which one of a given pair of different representations of the same number of clustered planar bubbles would have a smaller total perimeter. Assembled for a ceremony at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., to honor the 12 winners of the 2001 U.S.A. Mathematical Olympiad (USAMO), audience members...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Artist Susan Happersett of Jersey City, N.J., has come up with a novel twist on the venerable Möbius strip: a playful, eye-catching creation she describes as a Möbius accordion.A Möbius strip, or band, is the remarkable one-sided surface that results from joining together the two ends of a long strip of paper after twisting one end 180 degrees. Mathematicians, magicians, artists, and many others have been playing with this intriguing object since its discovery in the 19th century by August Ferdinand Möbius (1790–1868), a professor at the University of Leipzig in Germany.Happersett combines her...
    Found in: Numbers
  • Number theory offers a host of problems that are remarkably easy to state but fiendishly difficult to solve. Many of these questions and conjectures feature prime numbers—integers evenly divisible only by themselves and 1.For instance, primes often occur as pairs of consecutive odd integers: 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, 17 and 19, and so on. So-called twin primes are scattered throughout the list of all prime numbers. There are 16 twin prime pairs among the first 50 primes. The largest known twin prime is the 32,220-digit pair 318032361 x 2107001 +/–1, found recently by David Underbakke and Ph...
    Found in: Numbers
  • Like the ancient Pythagoreans, astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) found numbers fascinating. Imbued with the same conviction of a natural order that drove Pythagoras (c. 580–500 B.C.) and his followers to search for an underlying numerical harmony, Kepler maintained that the physical universe was laid out according to a mathematical design that was simple and accessible to human intelligence.The motions of the planets appeared discordant, Kepler argued, because no one had yet learned to hear their songs. The natural philosopher's task was to identify the prime cause from which all else log...
    Found in: Numbers
  • Like the ancient Pythagoreans, astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) found numbers fascinating. Imbued with the same conviction of a natural order that drove Pythagoras (c. 580–500 B.C.) and his followers to search for an underlying numerical harmony, Kepler maintained that the physical universe was laid out according to a mathematical design that was simple and accessible to human intelligence.The motions of the planets appeared discordant, Kepler argued, because no one had yet learned to hear their songs. The natural philosopher's task was to identify the prime cause from which all else log...
    Found in: Numbers
  • Sealed within a transparent, tapered, liquid-filled cylinder, illuminated colored globs slowly rise and fall. Meandering and deforming, their shapes and paths change unpredictably. Invented in 1963, a decorative fixture in many homes during the 1970s, and still in production, Lava Lite lamps are now the object of renewed curiosity.Indeed, researchers have come up with a novel application of the mesmerizing movements of the lamp’s globules. They use them as the starting point for generating a sequence of random numbers. Called lavarand, the random-number generator is the tongue-in-cheek work of...
    Found in: Numbers
  • Sealed within a transparent, tapered, liquid-filled cylinder, illuminated colored globs slowly rise and fall. Meandering and deforming, their shapes and paths change unpredictably. Invented in 1963, a decorative fixture in many homes during the 1970s, and still in production, Lava Lite lamps are now the object of renewed curiosity.Indeed, researchers have come up with a novel application of the mesmerizing movements of the lamp’s globules. They use them as the starting point for generating a sequence of random numbers. Called lavarand, the random-number generator is the tongue-in-cheek work of...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    One tradition that flourished 200 years ago in Japan, during its period of isolation from the western world, involved Euclidean geometry. Scholars and others would inscribe geometric problems on wooden tablets, then hang the tablets under the eaves of Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples as offerings. Such a tablet is called a sangaku, which means "mathematical tablet" in Japanese.More than 800 tablets have survived. Many of them feature drawings and problems that concern tangent circles.Here's one example. Suppose three circles are tangent to one another and rest on a base line. Find a relatio...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    One tradition that flourished 200 years ago in Japan, during its period of isolation from the western world, involved Euclidean geometry. Scholars and others would inscribe geometric problems on wooden tablets, then hang the tablets under the eaves of Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples as offerings. Such a tablet is called a sangaku, which means "mathematical tablet" in Japanese.More than 800 tablets have survived. Many of them feature drawings and problems that concern tangent circles.Here's one example. Suppose three circles are tangent to one another and rest on a base line. Find a relatio...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Like toy cars chasing each other on a looped racetrack, three stars can, in principle, trace out a figure-eight orbit in space. This newly discovered, mathematically surprising pattern of motion arises from the force of gravity acting on three bodies of equal mass. Their movements are timed so that each body in turn passes between the other two.Newton’s laws provide a precise answer to the problem of determining the motion of two bodies under the influence of gravity. If the solar system consisted of the sun and a single planet, for example, the planet would follow an elliptical orbit. When th...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Like toy cars chasing each other on a looped racetrack, three stars can, in principle, trace out a figure-eight orbit in space. This newly discovered, mathematically surprising pattern of motion arises from the force of gravity acting on three bodies of equal mass. Their movements are timed so that each body in turn passes between the other two.Newton’s laws provide a precise answer to the problem of determining the motion of two bodies under the influence of gravity. If the solar system consisted of the sun and a single planet, for example, the planet would follow an elliptical orbit. When th...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Computer programs can handle all sorts of data, from sums of money in bank accounts to sensor readings from scientific instruments. In many cases, the data are a set of discrete elements, such as temperatures. Moreover, some elements of a set may be larger in value than others, or they may exhibit some other relationship that allows you to rank them or put them in order.In mathematics, such a collection of elements is known as a partially ordered set, or poset. One example of a poset consists of an integer and all its positive divisors (excluding 1). For instance, the positive divisors of 42 a...
    Found in: Numbers
  • access
    Anyone who has waited for a bus in the city has probably casually observed that, after an inordinately long wait, two or three buses often come along at the same time.The question of why such bunching seems to happen has prompted all sorts of speculation. Some claim that bus bunching is actually a rare occurrence, but passengers tend to forget the much larger number of times when a single bus arrives. Others posit that bus drivers simply like to travel in packs.Mathematical models that simulate traffic flow confirm that bus bunching is a real phenomenon. Even though buses leave their depot at...
    Found in: Numbers
  arrow_dash_leftleft
Results
of 445
right