By watching "Mathematics is the queen of sciences" I've learned a lot of fascinating facts about mathematics. For example, did you know that by dropping a needle on a piece of paper with lines the same length apart, as long as the needle, you can potentially calculate pie. This is done by counting how many times the needle landed and stayed between the lines and had landed through a line. Something that shocked me was that if air was taken away from the equation, no matter what two items were dropped they would have landed at the same time. This blows my mind because you could have dropped a cannon ball and a bouncy ball and they would have landed at the same time, which I would have thought the cannon ball would hit the ground first. Did you know that their was a mathematical relationship between time and distance, and if you did, do you know what it is? I've learned that the distance an object travels is directly proportional to the square of its time, this is a mathematical expression of the physics of our universe. Galileo once said the universe is written in the language of mathematics which is mind blowing.
Titl was weird. But Really good. I learned something new. I would just suggest to clean it up a bit. But besides that pretty good.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this, Narciso! I'm wondering if you'd be willing to bookmark 2-3 of the highlights you mentioned, look further into them, and explain them to the OSLA team?
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