september 23 rd lecture

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September 23 rd Lecture Today’s lecture 1. Mersenne Primes and Perfect Numbers (Marin Mersenne) 2. Gut Reasoning - from NYT 15/0/9/2008 3. Procedures in Maple 4. The Final Project the midterm on the 25th The Exceptional Lie Group E

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September 23 rd Lecture. Today’s lecture Mersenne Primes and Perfect Numbers (Marin Mersenne) Gut Reasoning - from NYT 15/0/9/2008 Procedures in Maple The Final Project the midterm on the 25th. The Exceptional Lie Group E 8. ???. Euclid (3C BCE) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: September 23 rd  Lecture

September 23rd Lecture

Today’s lecture 1. Mersenne Primes and Perfect

Numbers (Marin Mersenne)

2. Gut Reasoning- from NYT 15/0/9/2008

3. Procedures in Maple

4. The Final Project• the midterm on the 25th

The Exceptional Lie Group E8

Page 2: September 23 rd  Lecture

Mersenne Primes and Perfect numbers

Euclid (3C BCE)and Euler (1707-83):

• For information on odd perfect numbers seewww.austms.org.au/Publ/Gazette/2008/Sep08/CommsRoberts.pdf

???

Page 3: September 23 rd  Lecture

Breaking News from www.mersenne.org

Page 4: September 23 rd  Lecture

GUT Reasoning: NYT (16/09/2008) One research team has found that how readily people rally their approximate number sense is linked over time to success in even the most advanced and abstruse mathematics courses. Other scientists have shown that preschool children are remarkably good at approximating the impact of adding to or subtracting from large groups of items but are poor at translating the approximate into the specific. Taken together, the new research suggests that math teachers might do well to emphasize the power of the ballpark figure, to focus less on arithmetic precision and more on general reckoning.

“When mathematicians and physicists are left alone in a room, one of the games they’ll play is called a Fermi problem, in which they try to figure out the approximate answer to an arbitrary problem,” said Rebecca Saxe, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is married to a physicist. “They’ll ask, how many piano tuners are there in Chicago, or what contribution to the ocean’s temperature do fish make, and they’ll try to come up with a plausible answer.”

“What this suggests to me,” she added, “is that the people whom we think of as being the most involved in the symbolic part of math intuitively know that they have to practice those other, nonsymbolic, approximating skills.”

Yes, but see also http://micromath.wordpress.com/2008/09/16/gut-instincts-surprising-role-in-math/

Page 5: September 23 rd  Lecture

Procedures in MapleProcedures are just fancier functions (in Maple attachment)

Calling Sequence

proc (argseq) local nseq; global nseq; options nseq; description stringseq; statseq end proc

proc (argseq)::type; local var1::type1, var2::type2, ...; global nseq; options nseq; description stringseq; statseq end proc

Parameters

argseq - the formal parameter names

type - (optional) an assertion on the type of the returned value

nseq - (optional) the names of local/global variables and the options in effect

var1,var2 - (optional) the names of local variables

type1,type2 - (optional) assertions on the types of local variables

stringseq - description lines for the procedure

statseq - the body of the procedure

Page 6: September 23 rd  Lecture

Examples

> lc := proc( s, u, t, v ) description "form a linear combination of the arguments"; s * u + t * v end proc; (or just end)

lc := proc (s, u, t, v) description "form a linear combination of the arguments"; s*u+t*v end proc

> print( lc );

proc (s, u, t, v) description "form a linear combination of the arguments"; s*u+t*v end proc

> lc( Pi, x, -I, y );

See Also

envvar, error, Functions, index[procedure], kernelopts, last_name_eval, Operators, parameters, Parameter passing, Procedure options, remember, Procedure type checking, procedure[paramtype], procname, Reading and saving, arg, nargs, return, spec_eval_rules, type[procedure], type[function]

Procedures in Maple

x Iy

Page 7: September 23 rd  Lecture

… best learned by example1. Basic procedures: keeps variables local

2. With loops and conditional steps:

Calling Sequence

| for <name> | | from <expr> | | by <expr> | | to <expr> | | while <expr> |

do <statement sequence> end do; (or od)

OR

| for <name> | | in <expr> | | while <expr> |

do <statement sequence> end do;

(Note: Phrases located between | | are optional.)

3. With recursive structure

4. With more complicated arguments

5. Using maple.ini files

Page 8: September 23 rd  Lecture

Inside Math and MathResourceBoth are mathematics dictionaries on Steroids:

–They allow you also to obtain output/draw pictures that can be dropped into Word or PowerPoint or Excel, or ….–Inside Math (School) and the MathResource (University)–We also saw Portrait 4 (Shown below)

• Its manual is on M2600 webpage

Page 9: September 23 rd  Lecture

Maths dictionaries on Steroids:n. one of the five regular polyhedra, once imbued with great mystical significance: a cube, a regular tetrahedron, a regular octahedron, a regular dodecahedron, or a regular icosahedron. Johannes Kepler (1571 - 1630) was led to his discovery of the laws of planetary motion and his defence of Copernican astronomy by circum-scribing or inscribing the orbits of the five other known planets around the Platonic solids, with an inscribed or circumscribed circle representing the orbit of the Earth; the results agree with observation, allowing for eccentricity, to within approximately 5%.

(OCR from MathResource)

Inside Math and MathResource, IIFrom Inside Math

Page 10: September 23 rd  Lecture

I expect 16-20 power point slides or 10-15 pages in Word which describe (using an appropriate level of mathematical text setting, prose and images) a Maple based exploration of one or more related topics.

Examples – A handful of the Explorations

• anywhere in the Computer as Crucible– Two or Three of the Ten Things to Try– An essay on the History of Pi– Another topic of your own choosing

In each case we want to “sign off” with you on the topic before the break.

– Either with Matt in a Tutorial or by email or in person with me.

More on the Taxicab question I asked last week www.durangobill.com/Ramanujan.html and on a generalization http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TaxicabNumber.html

The Final Project

To pass, you just have to follow the rules.

To get a good mark, you have to show some initiative and

add some value.