Rubik’s Cube Moves
Simon is getting faster and faster with the cube. Order a speed cube for his upcoming birthday? So much for “poor fine motor skills”.
a homeschooling blog about Simon, a young mathematician and programmer, and his little sister Neva. Visit https://simontiger.com
Simon is getting faster and faster with the cube. Order a speed cube for his upcoming birthday? So much for “poor fine motor skills”.
Today Simon learned that it was Euler who first came up with the idea that the infinite sum 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 +… converges to -1/12. Simon … Continue reading Ramanujan-converging
Simon saw this pattern in a Numberphile video featuring Tadashi Tokieda and recreated it in Excel, adding colours. There are 30 columns and 45 rows of digits in this picture, … Continue reading Trinity Hall Prime Number
Simon has discovered a great new graphing tool: Vectary.com! “Finally I have found something topological,” Simon says. “There is a branch in math called topology. It’s about deforming things. I … Continue reading Vectary.com
Simon doing math everywhere. And he showed me this beautiful trick of two rows adding up to equal numbers and their squares adding up to equal numbers. And the two … Continue reading Math on the Beach
Proving a Pythagorean triple. 3Blue1Brown did it in another way, using i.
Simon explains: The Knot Atlas is a complete catalogue of all the possible knots and links and links with 3 or fewer components and 11 or fewer crossings. The number … Continue reading Knots and Links
Simon is pretty obsessed with Knot Theory at the moment (a mathematical theory that is widely used in advanced biology and chemistry, for example in handling tangled DNA). He also … Continue reading Tricks with paperclips and Knot Theory
Simon made a remix of the Numberphile video called “Round Peg in a Square Hole” (by Tadashi Tokieda) and worked out the albraic formula behind the trick.
Simon worked out this formula using the traditional formula for the Zeta Function. He’s not not sure it’s new (he says he’s even sure it’s not new) but he has … Continue reading Simon’s Formula for the Zeta Function
“All you need to see that eta of one is the natural log of 2 is that! Easy, right? I was joking. Proving these things is pretty damn complicated, so … Continue reading Either gamma of 1/2 is infinity or the Riemann hypothesis is false