Interesting mathematical statements (1 Viewer)

leehuan

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A must know for the Ext 2 student:

Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
 

leehuan

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This has appeared elsewhere on this forum before:

Expressions for the Golden Ratio


 

leehuan

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Very famous result on what e actually is:



Still famous but not as famous result on what e is, esp amongst HSC students:

 

leehuan

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Tbh isn't the first statement really just a Taylor series?
 

InteGrand

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Tbh isn't the first statement really just a Taylor series?
Yeah, but sometimes it's actually more convenient to define functions by their power series representation and then prove other things about them.
 

Paradoxica

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Yeah, but sometimes it's actually more convenient to define functions by their power series representation and then prove other things about them.








The first and second statements are nearly equivalent down to the family of solutions for any differential equation.

The third statement is somewhat convoluted.
 

dan964

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987654321 is divisible by 9
987654312 is divisible by 8 (this particular one gives 123456789 btw)
987654213 is divisible by 7
987653214 is divisible by 6
987643215 is divisible by 5
987543216 is divisible by 4
986543217 is divisible by 3
976543218 is divisible by 2
876543219 is divisible by 1

0123456789 * 2 = 246913578 (a permutation of 0123456789)
And likewise up to 100; excluding multiples of 3
 

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There is approximately a 50% chance of two people sharing the same birthday in a room of 23 people
 

Paradoxica

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There is approximately a 50% chance of two people sharing the same birthday in a room of 23 people
This is, of course, assuming that every birthday date is identically probable, and that leap years do not exist, and that birthdays are treated as truly random. Under these conditions, a group of 70 people have a 99.9% chance of two people sharing a birthday.
 

AAEldar

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Certainly not a pure mathematician, but Cauchy's Integral Formula stands out for me.

Then I moved to stats.
 

Paradoxica

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Certainly not a pure mathematician, but Cauchy's Integral Formula stands out for me.

Then I moved to stats.
That's not a bad thing, there are unsolved problems in stats applicable to the real world such as p-values, error values, correlation vs. causation, interpolation of data, etc.
Most of these are relevant to the sciences, as statistical methods are required for collecting any information. Even the medical fields and the humanities require it.

But I digress.



 

braintic

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There is a lot of highly theoretical mathematics here.
Does anyone have more real-world mathematical statements?
(The birthday problem was a good one)
 

Paradoxica

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There is a lot of highly theoretical mathematics here.
Does anyone have more real-world mathematical statements?
(The birthday problem was a good one)
The Kakeya Needle Problem: What is the smallest area of a parking lot in which you can have a needle of length 1 turn around 180 degrees and return to its starting position, pointing in the other direction?

Answer: The area can be made arbitrarily small through a series of divisions and transformations of the shape required for the needle to turn around. Hence, no smallest area exists.
 

InteGrand

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The Kakeya Needle Problem: What is the smallest area of a parking lot in which you can have a needle of length 1 turn around 180 degrees and return to its starting position, pointing in the other direction?

Answer: The area can be made arbitrarily small through a series of divisions and transformations of the shape required for the needle to turn around. Hence, no smallest area exists.
This isn't very "practical" though, since the car / needle needs to be made arbitrarily thin if you want the area to be arbitrarily small. For anyone interested, there is a Numberphile video on the Kakeya Needle Problem: www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-dce6QmVAQ

 
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Paradoxica

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This isn't very "practical" though, since the car / needle needs to be made arbitrarily thin if you want the area to be arbitrarily small. For anyone interested, there is a Numberphile video on the Kakeya Needle Problem: www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-dce6QmVAQ
Well the problem never stated any width. It is a mathematical solution, after all.





 

InteGrand

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Well the problem never stated any width. It is a mathematical solution, after all.





Haha yeah, it is an interesting result, I just meant that it's not really real-world as braintic wanted.
 

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