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Temporada 2020
2020x1
Why was this visual proof missed for 400 years? (Fermat's two square theorem)
Episode overview
Today's video is about a new really wonderfully simple and visual proof of Fermat's famous two square theorem: An odd prime can be written as the sum of two integer squares iff it is of
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Today's video is about a new really wonderfully simple and visual proof of Fermat's famous two square theorem: An odd prime can be written as the sum of two integer squares iff it is of the form 4k+1. This proof is a visual incarnation of Zagier's (in)famous one-sentence proof.
2020x2
Why did they prove this amazing theorem in 200 different ways?
Episode overview
The longest Mathologer video ever, just shy of an hour (eventually it's going to happen :) One video I've been meaning to make for a long, long time. A Mathologerization of the Law of
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The longest Mathologer video ever, just shy of an hour (eventually it's going to happen :) One video I've been meaning to make for a long, long time. A Mathologerization of the Law of Quadratic Reciprocity. This is another one of my MASTERCLASS videos. The slide show consists of 550 slides and the whole thing took forever to make. Just to give you an idea of the work involved in producing a video like this, preparing the subtitles for this video took me almost 4 hours. Why do anything as crazy as this? Well, just like many other mathematicians I consider the law of quadratic reciprocity as one of the most beautiful and surprising facts about prime numbers. While other mathematicians were inspired to come up with ingenious proofs of this theorem, over 200 different proofs so far and counting, I thought I contribute to it's illustrious history by actually trying me very best of getting one of those crazily complicated proofs within reach of non-mathematicians, to make the unaccessible accessible :) Now let's see how many people are actually prepared to watch a (close to) one hour long math(s) video :)
Today we derive them all, the most famous infinite pi formulas: The Leibniz-Madhava formula for pi, John Wallis's infinite product formula, Lord Brounckner's infinite fraction formula,
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Today we derive them all, the most famous infinite pi formulas: The Leibniz-Madhava formula for pi, John Wallis's infinite product formula, Lord Brounckner's infinite fraction formula, Euler's Basel formula and it's infinitely many cousins. And we do this starting with one of Euler's crazy strokes of genius, his infinite product formula for the sine function.
This video was inspired by Paul Levrie's one-page article Euler's wonderful insight which appeared in the Mathematical Intelligencer in 2012. Stop the video at the right spot and zoom in and have a close look at this article. Very pretty.
A blast from the past. A video about my fun quest to pin down the best ways of lacing mathematical shoes from almost 20 years ago. Lots of pretty and accessible math. Includes a proof that came to me in a dream (and that actually worked)!
A blast from the past. A video about my fun quest to pin down the best ways of lacing mathematical shoes from almost 20 years ago. Lots of pretty and accessible math. Includes a proof that came to me in a dream (and that actually worked)!
2020x5
What does this prove? Some of the most gorgeous visual "shrink" proofs ever invented
Episode overview
Bit of a mystery Mathologer today with the title of the video not giving away much. Anyway it all starts with the quest for equilateral triangles in square grids and by the end of it we
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Bit of a mystery Mathologer today with the title of the video not giving away much. Anyway it all starts with the quest for equilateral triangles in square grids and by the end of it we find ourselves once more in the realms of irrationality. This video contains some extra gorgeous visual proofs that hardly anybody seems to know about.
Today's video is about making sense of an infinite fraction that pops up in an anecdote about the Indian mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan.
Today's video is about making sense of an infinite fraction that pops up in an anecdote about the Indian mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan.
2020x7
The hardest "What comes next?" (Euler's pentagonal formula)
Episode overview
This video is about one or my all-time favourite theorems in math(s): Euler's amazing pentagonal number theorem, it's unexpected connection to a prime number detector, the crazy infinite
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This video is about one or my all-time favourite theorems in math(s): Euler's amazing pentagonal number theorem, it's unexpected connection to a prime number detector, the crazy infinite refinement of the Fibonacci growth rule into a growth rule for the partition numbers, etc. All math(s) mega star material, featuring guest appearances by Ramanujan, Hardy and Rademacher, and the "first substantial" American theorem by Fabian Franklin.
2020x8
700 years of secrets of the Sum of Sums (paradoxical harmonic series)
Episode overview
Today's video is about the harmonic series 1+1/2+1/3+... . Apart from all the usual bits (done right and animated :) I've included a lot of the amazing properties of this prototypical
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Today's video is about the harmonic series 1+1/2+1/3+... . Apart from all the usual bits (done right and animated :) I've included a lot of the amazing properties of this prototypical infinite series that hardly anybody knows about. Enjoy, and if you are teaching this stuff, I hope you'll find something interesting to add to your repertoire!
2020x9
The ARCTIC CIRCLE THEOREM or Why do physicists play dominoes?
Episode overview
I only stumbled across the amazing arctic circle theorem a couple of months ago while preparing the video on Euler's pentagonal theorem. A perfect topic for a Christmas video.
Before
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I only stumbled across the amazing arctic circle theorem a couple of months ago while preparing the video on Euler's pentagonal theorem. A perfect topic for a Christmas video.
Before I forget, the winner of the lucky draw announced in my last video is Zachary Kaplan. He wins a copy of my book Q.E.D. Beauty in mathematical proof. Zachary please get in touch with me via a comment in this video or otherwise.
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