infinity – The Math Factor Podcast http://mathfactor.uark.edu The Math Factor Podcast Site Tue, 24 Jul 2012 21:06:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.25 2006-2007 strauss@uark.edu (The Math Factor Podcast) strauss@uark.edu (The Math Factor Podcast) The Math Factor Podcast Site The Math Factor Podcast The Math Factor Podcast strauss@uark.edu no no G4G9: Report From the Festivities! http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2010/03/g4g9-report-from-the-festivities/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2010/03/g4g9-report-from-the-festivities/#comments Sun, 28 Mar 2010 16:02:19 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/?p=1058 Quick interviews with folks here at the Gathering For Gardner, including Stephen Wolfram, Will Shortz,  Dale Seymour, John Conway and many others. 

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2010/03/g4g9-report-from-the-festivities/feed/ 1 0:18:58 Quick interviews with folks here at the Gathering For Gardner, including Stephen Wolfram, Will Shortz,  Dale Seymour, John Conway and many others.  Quick interviews with folks here at the Gathering For Gardner, including Stephen Wolfram, Will Shortz,  Dale Seymour, John Conway and many others.  Favorites, guests, infinity, logic, numbers, paradoxes, Podcasts strauss@uark.edu no no
EO. Spaghetti Loops http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/10/eo-spaghetti-loops/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/10/eo-spaghetti-loops/#comments Thu, 02 Oct 2008 21:27:34 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/10/02/eo-spaghetti-loops/ Just why does e appear in so many guises?


This week we pose two interesting e related puzzles:

1) Obtain a large bowl with N strands of spaghetti; grab two loose ends and tie them together. Repeat, until all the loose ends are paired. You will now have a bowl full of loops of spaghetti. On average, what is the expected number of loops?

2) N people walk into a room; each of their (unique) names has been written on a nametag and placed into a bowl. If each person picks a nametag at random, what is the probability that no one gets the right name?

In both cases, the interesting thing is what happens as N increases without bound.

When we were done taping, I remarked to Kyle that, well, surely that’s the end of e related stuff for a while. But I just remembered one of the best e related puzzles of all. We’ll add it here as a bonus:

3) Someone has written counting numbers, one on each of N cards. You don’t have any idea what the largest number is. The cards are shuffled and arranged in a line face down.

You turn the cards over, discarding the cards one by one; you may stop at any time. Your goal is to pick the card with the largest number. (You can’t go back and retrieve a discarded card, and you can’t continue once you stop).

Your strategy, then, is to flip over some number M of cards just to see what the field is like, then taking the first card better than any of the cards in your test sample.

You don’t want M to be too small– you need to get a feel for how big the numbers might be; but you don’t want M to be too big— you don’t want to actually waste the biggest number in your test.

Amazingly, the optimal M works 1/e (almost 37%!) of the time. What is this M, and why does this work?

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/10/eo-spaghetti-loops/feed/ 7 0:13:50 Just why does e appear in so many guises? This week we pose two interesting e related puzzles: 1) Obtain a large bowl with N strands of spaghetti; grab two loose ends and tie them together. Repeat, until all the loose ends are paired. You will now[...] Just why does e appear in so many guises? This week we pose two interesting e related puzzles: 1) Obtain a large bowl with N strands of spaghetti; grab two loose ends and tie them together. Repeat, until all the loose ends are paired. You will now have a bowl full of loops of spaghetti. On average, what is the expected number of loops? 2) N people walk into a room; each of their (unique) names has been written on a nametag and placed into a bowl. If each person picks a nametag at random, what is the probability that no one gets the right name? In both cases, the interesting thing is what happens as N increases without bound. When we were done taping, I remarked to Kyle that, well, surely that’s the end of e related stuff for a while. But I just remembered one of the best e related puzzles of all. We’ll add it here as a bonus: 3) Someone has written counting numbers, one on each of N cards. You don’t have any idea what the largest number is. The cards are shuffled and arranged in a line face down. You turn the cards over, discarding the cards one by one; you may stop at any time. Your goal is to pick the card with the largest number. (You can’t go back and retrieve a discarded card, and you can’t continue once you stop). Your strategy, then, is to flip over some number M of cards just to see what the field is like, then taking the first card better than any of the cards in your test sample. You don’t want M to be too small– you need to get a feel for how big the numbers might be; but you don’t want M to be too big— you don’t want to actually waste the biggest number in your test. Amazingly, the optimal M works 1/e (almost 37%!) of the time. What is this M, and why does this work? infinity, numbers strauss@uark.edu no no
Follow Up: The Harmonic Series http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/follow-up-the-harmonic-series/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/follow-up-the-harmonic-series/#comments Sat, 16 Aug 2008 19:18:18 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/?p=245 That the worm falls off the end of the rope depends on the fact that the incredible
harmonic series

1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + . . .
diverges to infinity, growing as large as you please!

If you try adding terms up on a calculator, this scarcely seems possible! By the time you have added the hundredth term, you will have a reached only a whopping 5.187… (and each new term will be less than .01).

After adding up a million terms, you will have made it only to about 14.39272672… — and each new term will be less than .000001. Does the series really diverge?

The eighteenth century mathematician Jacob Bernoulli gave a very elegant proof that it does:

1/2 is at least 1/2

1/3 + 1/4 is at least 1/4 + 1/4 = 1/2

1/5 + 1/6 + 1/7 + 1/8 is at least 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 = 1/2

1/9 + . . . + 1/16 is at least 8 x 1/16 = 1/2

etc. So the result of adding up the first 2n terms 1/2 + 1/3 + . . . + 1/2n is at least n/2, and in particular, can be as large as we please.

But this does take a long time to get anywhere. To add up to, say, 100, Bernoulli’s proof shows us that 2198 (about 4×1059) terms will suffice. But maybe this is more than we actually need.


A basic fact from calculus is that the area under the curve y = 1/x, from x = 1 to x = N is exactly ln N.

Now the area of a box 1 unit wide and 1/n units tall is 1/n, and boxes of width 1 and heights 1, 1/2, 1/3, . . . altogether have area 1 + 1/2 + 1/3 . . .

Here we see that these boxes can be arranged to show that

1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + 1/5 + 1/6 + 1/7 > ln 8

Shifting the boxes over, we see that

1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 + 1/5 + 1/6 + 1/7 + 1/8 < ln 8

This gives us a much better bound on the harmonic series. Generally, we have that

1 + 1/2 + . . . + 1/n is between ln (n+1) and (ln n) + 1.

So to be sure that the series sums to at least 100, we can be sure that e100-1 (about 2.7×1043) terms will suffice!


The great Leonhard Euler proved that in fact, in the long run, 1 + . . . + 1/n tends to be exactly ln n plus a constant; Euler’s constant, usually denoted by γ (gamma), is about .577215664901…

So the sum of the first million terms is about (ln 1,000,000) + γ, and if we want to sum to 100, we need to have n such that ln n + γ is greater than 100; in other words, e (100 – γ) (about 1.5×1043) terms will do.


The series Σ 1/(n ln n) diverges even more slowly still, taking about e^e^n terms to sum to n (!!) The series Σ 1/(n (ln n) (ln ln n)) takes e^e^e^n terms to sum to n. Etc!!

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EH. The Worm Makes It! http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eh-the-worm-makes-it/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eh-the-worm-makes-it/#respond Sat, 16 Aug 2008 18:15:22 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/?p=246

Dana Richards, editor of Martin Gardner’s Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems explains why the worm makes it, in only about 15,092,688,622,113,788,323,693,563,264,538,101,449,859,497 steps! (Give or take a few.) This incredible fact depends on the mysterious Harmonic Series, discussed a little more in our next post.

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eh-the-worm-makes-it/feed/ 0 0:05:28 Dana Richards, editor of Martin Gardner’s Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems explains why the worm makes it, in only about 15,092,688,622,113,788,323,693,563,264,538,101,449,859,497 steps! (Give or take a few.) This incredible fact [...] Dana Richards, editor of Martin Gardner’s Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems explains why the worm makes it, in only about 15,092,688,622,113,788,323,693,563,264,538,101,449,859,497 steps! (Give or take a few.) This incredible fact depends on the mysterious Harmonic Series, discussed a little more in our next post. answers, infinity, numbers strauss@uark.edu no no
EG. The Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eg-the-colossal-book-of-short-puzzles-and-problems/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eg-the-colossal-book-of-short-puzzles-and-problems/#respond Tue, 12 Aug 2008 17:47:00 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/?p=244

Dana Richards, editor of The Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems discusses the amazing Martin Gardner and his legacy!

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2008/08/eg-the-colossal-book-of-short-puzzles-and-problems/feed/ 0 0:06:10 Dana Richards, editor of The Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems discusses the amazing Martin Gardner and his legacy! Dana Richards, editor of The Colossal Book of Short Puzzles and Problems discusses the amazing Martin Gardner and his legacy! Favorites, guests, infinity, logic, numbers, paradoxes strauss@uark.edu no no
CW. The Surreal Numbers http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/09/cw-the-surreal-numbers/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/09/cw-the-surreal-numbers/#respond Wed, 26 Sep 2007 16:30:26 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/09/26/cw-the-surreal-numbers/ What follows after 0, 1, 2, … , once you’ve managed to list every counting number?

Around 1875, Georg Cantor created — or discovered if you like — the transfinite ordinals : the list continues 0, 1, 2, …, then ω , ω + 1, ω + 2, etc, for quite a long long way. John H. Conway tells us about his Surreal Numbers , which add in such gems as

1 / √ ω

Check out Knuth’s Surreal Numbers, Conway & Guy’s Book of Numbers , or for more advanced users, Conway’s On Numbers and Games.

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/09/cw-the-surreal-numbers/feed/ 0 0:10:04 What follows after 0, 1, 2, … , once you’ve managed to list every counting number? Around 1875, Georg Cantor created — or discovered if you like — the transfinite ordinals : the list continues 0, 1, 2, …, then [...] What follows after 0, 1, 2, … , once you’ve managed to list every counting number? Around 1875, Georg Cantor created — or discovered if you like — the transfinite ordinals : the list continues 0, 1, 2, …, then ω , ω + 1, ω + 2, etc, for quite a long long way. John H. Conway tells us about his Surreal Numbers , which add in such gems as 1 / √ ω Check out Knuth’s Surreal Numbers, Conway & Guy’s Book of Numbers , or for more advanced users, Conway’s On Numbers and Games. guests, infinity, logic, paradoxes strauss@uark.edu no no
CK. The Third Tree http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/ck-the-third-tree/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/ck-the-third-tree/#comments Sun, 06 May 2007 18:02:12 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/06/ck-the-third-tree/ Niclas Hedell, a listener, poses a problem from his days in the Swedish military: given two trees in the forest, and a rope twice as long as the distance between the trees, how do you find a third tree so that all three make a right triangle.

And we explain how the Stork can catch the Frog.

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/ck-the-third-tree/feed/ 1 0:08:36 Niclas Hedell, a listener, poses a problem from his days in the Swedish military: given two trees in the forest, and a rope twice as long as the distance between the trees, how do you find a third tree so that all three make a right triangle. And we[...] Niclas Hedell, a listener, poses a problem from his days in the Swedish military: given two trees in the forest, and a rope twice as long as the distance between the trees, how do you find a third tree so that all three make a right triangle. And we explain how the Stork can catch the Frog. answers, guests, infinity strauss@uark.edu no no
Follow-up: The Stork and The Frog http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/follow-up-the-stork-and-the-frog/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/follow-up-the-stork-and-the-frog/#comments Sun, 06 May 2007 17:02:13 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/05/06/follow-up-the-stork-and-the-frog/ Amusingly, this problem has exactly the same solution as the proof that there are as many rational numbers as there are counting numbers. And the proof generalizes: one stork can catch three frogs, or ten or fifty.

Here are some bonus problems:

  1. The stork can catch the frog even if it can start at any rational number and hop any fixed rational distance each step.
  2. However, if the frog can start at any real number or hop any real distance, the stork has no strategy that guarantees a catch. This is, in effect, the same as proving that the real numbers are not countable.
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CH. Rayo’s Number! http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/04/ch-rayos-number/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/04/ch-rayos-number/#comments Sun, 15 Apr 2007 12:50:37 +0000 http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/04/15/ch-rayos-number/ A contestant for our Million-Dollar-Give-Away sent in Rayo’s Number, hitherto the largest number ever used for any real purpose: to wit, winning the

LARGE NUMBER CHAMPIONSHIP

rayo_poster.jpg

Check out the article by Scot Aaronson that inspired them to duke it out! And this thread on the math forum is quite interesting as well.

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2007/04/ch-rayos-number/feed/ 2 0:15:21 A contestant for our Million-Dollar-Give-Away sent in Rayo’s Number, hitherto the largest number ever used for any real purpose: to wit, winning the LARGE NUMBER CHAMPIONSHIP Check out the article by Scot Aaronson that inspired them to duke [...] A contestant for our Million-Dollar-Give-Away sent in Rayo’s Number, hitherto the largest number ever used for any real purpose: to wit, winning the LARGE NUMBER CHAMPIONSHIP Check out the article by Scot Aaronson that inspired them to duke it out! And this thread on the math forum is quite interesting as well. answers, Favorites, guests, infinity, logic, numbers, paradoxes strauss@uark.edu no no
BL. Eternally diminishing returns http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2006/10/eternally-diminishing-returns/ http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2006/10/eternally-diminishing-returns/#respond Mon, 30 Oct 2006 14:20:26 +0000 http://theserver.uark.edu/~strauss/?p=16 With enough time and patience and bananas, can we go as far as we please?

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http://mathfactor.uark.edu/2006/10/eternally-diminishing-returns/feed/ 0 0:06:50 With enough time and patience and bananas, can we go as far as we please? With enough time and patience and bananas, can we go as far as we please? answers, infinity strauss@uark.edu no no