Saturday, 29 December 2012

Fractal

A fractal is a special image that is generated using a very simple mathematical formula. If you take a smaller portion of the image and then magnify it, you find a new image within, which is just as complicated. The image can be magnified millions of times, and in each case, a new image is revealed. 



























Okay, I can’t post every single image(or rather, the rest of the lovely fractals that i had, have refused to be copied here or aren't clear :O conspiracy) but I think you get the idea. You can google the rest if you are interested.


So when they say math is beautiful, I think they really mean it :D  

SUDOKU!


Sudoku is a puzzle designed by Howard Garns. He was a retired architect and a puzzle constructor.
The puzzle has been popular ever since appearing on daily newspapers for over 30 years.
A Finnish mathematician, Arto Inkala, has made what HE claims to be the hardest Sudoku puzzle.
If you're open for the challenge, AI Escargot presumably requires you to wrap your brain around eight casual relationships simultaneously, whereas your everyday "very hard" sudoku piece, only require you to think about a meager one or two of these relationships at once.
Have fun J

World's hardest sudoku: can you beat it?

Saturday, 10 December 2011

...in the moment

Writing down thoughts isn’t half as right as thinking them. I mean I think so fast and so many things at the same time that writing limits me to put the thoughts down in a sensible and one pattern manner.

I have been in confusion for a whole month. Trying to live in the moment almost like what I think either most people do or another version that I thought they should adapt. I used my gifts in the most veil of ways. I look at that Lilian now and I’m like what the hell was she thinking?

I can’t live in the  moment or at least I have not quite understood what that means. Because some of it means live like there’s no tomorrow. If there is a tomorrow, wont the consequences of today affect it. Because no matter how the past is gone, we carry bits of it with us. It’s hard to forget the past because many at times it’s the one that haunts us. Hence living in the moment is just a theory. It sounds good in theory and can’t be done practically. And living in the moment most of the time doesn’t involve helping the needy or going to church or doing something nice for someone else. It’s always a very selfish phrase that leads us humans to think of ‘what do I want for this moment’ or ‘what is good for ME at this moment’. Not what should I do for my neighbor now or what should I have done for my mother today.
Living like it was our last day on earth also takes that explanation. Because on your last day, as humans we would like to finally fulfill what we have always wanted or to follow our hearts and most of the times our hearts are selfish. They want good things but only for ourselves. Not the greater human kind.
I have experienced this in the past month or two when I got my heart broken. I decided to be a different person and live life the way I thought I ought to. Then I have come to realize that how I was living my life was the way I ought to. Where I thought through many things and I followed my heart and instinct. Maybe I’m right or maybe I am wrong but what I know for sure is that I didn’t like the person I became. She was vain. She was selfish. She was carefree in not a good way. She was a *****. She was okay with being a *****. She was trying to fit in with everyone else and also keep up with books. She didn’t really understand what it meant to live in the moment. Because there are days she really needed to be in touch with reality where the moment had no place in it.

I just think everything has its time. When to rebel..but you can't rebel forever so to chose when to sit back and watch the world turn. When to go crazy and when you should completely have your sanity with you. That way life will be lived and to its maximum not only at that moment. Because it wouldn't exist if the last moment led you to the grave. So moments are just moments. Cease them but remember that life is much more than that particular moment which was the future and will be the past. It is just a moment. With no particular place in time apart from now. That can change both the future and the past. So if not thought through carefully or if just misused, then it's not worth the moment.


Sunday, 25 September 2011

Acrostic Poem

An acrostic poem uses the letters in a topic, to begin each line. All lines of the poem should relate to or describe the poem :)-this is a smiley btw (i think this site should invest more on better looking emoticons.) 

that's better, now back to main topic, an acrostic poem is actually interesting. An example:

      The Colour Of Peace
      By Paul McCann
      Pray for understanding to come
      Each time and for everyone
      An end to the hostility
      Coloured as one in fragility
      Enter compatibility
      ----I tried one out myself----
      Lily
      by Lilian
      Lovely and adorable is the flower
      I marvel at its beauty day long
      Looks delicate and feeble
      Yet its brightening bliss is perishable

    Not as good as Paul's but i gave it a shot. You can check out this link in case you want to make one too for fun:   www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/interactives/acrostic/

    Sunday, 4 September 2011

    Autobiographical number

    Yeah sounds weird doesn't it...
    It is a number with ten digits or less with the first digit (from the left) indicating the number of zeros it contains, the second digit the number of ones, the third digit the number of twos and bla bla bla...
    One would think...well if its a number with a maximum of 10 digits, well we can have a large number of autobiographical numbers. NO! there are only 7 of them. Now, you could try finding which ones they are. I mean..7 only and you have the clues of how the digits in an autobiographical number are arranged. How hard can it be??
    I'll give you the smallest and the largest autobiographical numbers as a sort of clue
    The smallest autobiographical number is 1210 and the largest, 6210001000
    :)
    good luck!

    Wednesday, 17 August 2011

    Why Pierre de Fermat is the patron saint of unfinished business

    In 1637, French mathematician Pierre de Fermat jotted a cryptic conjecture in the margins of a textbook. His last theorem managed to drive mathematicians bonkers for the next four centuries (358 years) before this theorem was solved.
     

    Fermat accomplished many feats. He helped develop analytic geometry along with fellow Frenchman René Descartes. He planted the seed that would blossom into differential calculus. He made important contributions to optics, probability theory, and most of all, number theory. He was fluent in five languages. And he managed all of this while holding down a job as a lawyer.
    But Fermat is best remembered not for what he did, but for what he left undone. One day in 1637, while perusing his copy of an ancient Greek text by the 3rd century mathematician Diophantus, Fermat jotted a note in the margins that would drive mathematicians crazy for the next four centuries.
    Fermat's marginalia, which was written in Latin and later discovered by his son after he died, read: "It is impossible to separate a cube into two cubes, or a fourth power into two fourth powers, or in general, any power higher than the second, into two like powers. I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain."
    In other words, an + bn can never equal cn , as long as a, b, and c are positive integers and as long as n is greater than two.

    Go ahead and plug in some numbers for a, b, c, and n, and you'll see that they don't add up (or just take our word for it). But it turns out that coming up with a mathematical theorem proving it for every integer greater than two is really, really, really hard.

    Even though he lived for another 28 years, Fermat never got around to sharing his "truly marvelous proof" with anyone, as far as we know.
    Subsequent generations of mathematicians chipped away at it. Fermat himself had inadvertently proved it for n = 4, in his only surviving mathematical proof. By the beginning of the 19th century, it had been proven for n = 3, n = 5, and n = 7, but a general proof was nowhere in sight. In 1815, the great French mathematician Sophie Germain proved it for a special class of prime numbers now called Sophie Germain primes, which opened the door to further proofs.
    By 1993, Fermat's Last Theorem had been solved for all prime numbers less than four million, but the universal proof remained elusive. For many years, Fermat's conjecture held a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records as the World's Most Difficult Math Problem.
    It was finally solved in 1994 by British mathematician Andrew Wiles(ctrl+click to follow link) , whose proof took seven years to complete and ran over 100 pages. Wiles, who was knighted for his efforts, deployed advanced algebraic geometry that was not available to anyone in the 17th century, suggesting that Fermat took a different approach in his unpublished proof. That or he was completely full of it.
    Still, if Fermat had somehow managed to publish his proof during his lifetime, he would probably not be nearly as famous as he is today. So the next time someone asks you about the dishes in the sink, the half-written novel in the desk drawer, or that '67 Camaro sitting on blocks on your lawn, simply think of Fermat, and respond that you have a truly marvelous plan to finish your project, but that the day is too narrow to contain it.

    If the link doesn't work and you really want to know what the proof was, chill for the next blog :)