The second issue of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics has recently been posted -- with more new poems. The first issue contained a poem by Philip Holmes about one of the most amazing collections of numbers in all of mathematics, the Cantor Ternary Set. This set, discovered by Henry John Stephen Smith (1826-1883) but popularized by Georg Cantor (1845-1918) consists of all the real numbers whose base 3 or ternary representations involve only the digits 0 and 2. Like a fishing net, the Cantor Ternary Set is mostly holes. "Gaps" by Philip Holmes spreads it out before us -- and reflects on what else it may represent:
Showing posts with label Cantor Ternary Set. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cantor Ternary Set. Show all posts
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Friday, May 14, 2010
Poems starring mathematicians - 6 (Mandelbrot)
More familiar than the name Benoit Mandelbrot are images, like the one to the left, of the fractal that bears his name. Born in Poland (1924) and educated in France, Mandelbrot moved to the US in 1958 to join the research staff at IBM. A fractal is a rough or fragmented geometric shape that can be split into parts, each of which is a reduced-size copy of the whole, a property called self-similarity.
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