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Pythagorean theorem

Posted on 2020/07/19 by Carl Robitaille
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Pythagorean theorem#mtbos #iteachmath #math #maths pic.twitter.com/wgAvcFk6dq

— Idan Tal (@MagicPi2) July 19, 2020
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Why a Watch Beep Is Exactly 2¹¹ Hz (2048 Hz)

Posted on 2020/07/19 by Carl Robitaille
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Posted in mathématiques, physique, produits | Leave a reply

The Problem with Research Software Engineering

Posted on 2020/07/18 by Carl Robitaille
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Posted in mathématiques, physique, programmation | Leave a reply

Visual proof of 1/4 + 1/4² + 1/4³ + … = 1/3

Posted on 2020/07/18 by Carl Robitaille
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Visual proof of
1/4 + 1/4² + 1/4³ + … = 1/3 pic.twitter.com/VZ3qTUj3xt

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) March 10, 2019
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Hat Problems

Posted on 2020/07/18 by Carl Robitaille
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A Proof from “The Book”: The limit of sin(x)/x as x→0

Posted on 2020/07/17 by Carl Robitaille
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https://t.co/hOMm1jZgqR

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) July 17, 2020
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Why do calculators get this wrong? (We don’t know!)

Posted on 2020/07/17 by Carl Robitaille
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Posted in inusité, mathématiques, produits | Leave a reply

A Mathematician’s Way* of Converting Miles to Kilometers

Posted on 2020/07/17 by Carl Robitaille
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A Mathematician's Way* of Converting Miles to Kilometers

• 1 mi ≈ 1.609 km

• The ratio of consecutive Fibonacci numbers Fₙ₊₁/Fₙ tends to the golden ratio φ ≈ 1.618 as n increases

So Fₙ mi ≈ Fₙ₊₁ km

*This is how I do it 😅 pic.twitter.com/Jbuwj6rDC1

— Tamás Görbe (@TamasGorbe) August 5, 2019
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The almost impossible chessboard puzzle

Posted on 2020/07/17 by Carl Robitaille
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The ride-or-die Royal Society outlook: Raphson on Leibniz

Posted on 2020/07/17 by Carl Robitaille
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Raphson toeing the line on:
(1) Leibniz only devised his own notation to disguise his theft, and,
(2) It is a bad notation

The ride-or-die Royal Society outlook pic.twitter.com/480QRIdwyt

— Clare Moriarty (@quiteclare) July 15, 2020
Posted in histoire, mathématiques | Leave a reply

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