Showing posts with label Clifford Pickover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clifford Pickover. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

A few trivia about the fine structure constant

Clifford Pickover

In a post I published in this blog over three years ago, I talked about the fine structure constant and some of its physical peculiarities. In this post I am going to talk about some of its mathematical peculiarities. I have taken them from a book I have mentioned on other occasions: A Passion for Mathematics, by Clifford A. Pickover.

As we know, the most exact value of this constant is this:

α = 1/137.035999206

Pickover points out that Eric W. Weisstein, in his World of Physics website, offers two mathematical approximations incredibly close to this value:

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Mathematical trivia and quotes from mathematicians

I have taken the following trivia and quotes about mathematics from the book A Passion for Mathematics, by Clifford A. Pickover, which I have mentioned in another post in this blog. These are the trivia:

  • Let's see four amazing properties of number 5: a) It is the hypotenuse of the smallest Pythagorean triangle. b) There are five Platonic solids. c) It is the smallest automorphic number. Automorphic numbers are those whose square ends in the number. d) It is probably the only odd untouchable number. Untouchable numbers are those that are not equal to the sum of the proper divisors of any other number.

Thursday, June 20, 2019

The symbol of death


Azrael, the angel of death
Evelyn De Morgan (1855-1919)
For an educated classical Greek, the number 8 represented death. Why? Let’s see what this funeral assignment was based on.
  1. Multiply by 8 the first 8 natural numbers.
  2. Add the digits for each result.
  3. If the total obtained has more than one digit, we add those digits again.

Multiply
Add digits
2nd addition
1×8=8
8
8
2×8=16
1+6=7
7
3×8=24
2+4=6
6
4×8=32
3+2=5
5
5×8=40
4+0=4
4
6×8=48
4+8=12
1+2=3
7×8=56
5+6=11
1+1=2
8×8=64
6+4=10
1+0=1

Observe that we obtain the sequence 8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1. For the Greeks, this succession starts at 8 and descends to die at 1. That is why number 8 represented death.