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Erdős published more than 1500 papers

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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Erdős published more than 1500 papers
• The most number of publications in one year was in 1978 at 65 when he published 49 papers
• He published 118 papers after 80 pic.twitter.com/ln45yUHsin

— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) November 13, 2020
Posted in histoire, mathématiques | Leave a reply

Integral representation of n factorial (Euler, 1729)

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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Integral representation of n factorial (Euler, 1729) pic.twitter.com/wOrNDZE5G8

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) July 10, 2020
Posted in histoire, mathématiques | Leave a reply

John von Neumann

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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https://youtu.be/Y2jiQXI6nrE

Eugene Wigner tells the story of Max Born giving the "two bikes and a fly" puzzle to John von Neumann pic.twitter.com/BOVfcMg7c7

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) November 10, 2020
Posted in mathématiques | Leave a reply

Map of the Earth with mercator projection using a very unusual centerpoint

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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Map of the Earth with mercator projection using a very unusual centerpoint

Posted in géologie, inusité, mathématiques | Leave a reply

In 1775, Lagrange introduced these compact forms to describe the area of the triangle or the volume of the tetrahedron

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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In 1775, Lagrange introduced these compact forms to describe the area of the triangle or the volume of the tetrahedron. pic.twitter.com/tMwseDN4AS

— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) November 12, 2020
Posted in histoire, mathématiques | Leave a reply

Proof Without Words: 1/3 + (1/3)² + (1/3)³ + … = 1/2

Posted on 2020/11/13 by Carl Robitaille
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Proof Without Words
1/3 + (1/3)² + (1/3)³ + … = 1/2 pic.twitter.com/oW8T4p4JeI

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) January 14, 2020
Posted in mathématiques | Leave a reply

Cubes and cones

Posted on 2020/11/11 by Carl Robitaille
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🙂 pic.twitter.com/DAwlSG6tkq

— dave (@beesandbombs) November 11, 2020
Posted in infographie, mathématiques | Leave a reply

Why do Biden’s votes not follow Benford’s Law?

Posted on 2020/11/11 by Carl Robitaille
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Posted in mathématiques, politique américaine | Leave a reply

Giuseppe Luigi Lagrangia was born in Turin in 1736. He later moved to France  naturalized french and adapted his name to Joseph-Louis Lagrange

Posted on 2020/11/11 by Carl Robitaille
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Giuseppe Luigi Lagrangia was born in Turin 🇮🇹 in 1736. He later moved to France 🇫🇷 naturalized french and adapted his name to Joseph-Louis Lagrange. pic.twitter.com/IhAdpmVq1A

— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) November 11, 2020
Posted in histoire, mathématiques | Leave a reply

E = ma^2 + mb^2

Posted on 2020/11/09 by Carl Robitaille
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E = ma^2 + mb^2

spitting straight faccs

— Jens Fehlau | Papa Flammy :v (@FlammableMaths) November 9, 2020
Posted in drôle, mathématiques | Leave a reply

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