This post celebrates not only Agnesi (who was born 301 years ago today) but also present-day mathematician and writer Evelyn Lamb who produces lively and informative articles about STEM topics and people. Go here to read Lamb's article about Agnesi for the Smithsonian Magazine on May 16, 2018 -- celebrating Agnesi's 300th birthday.
Thursday, May 16, 2019
If 1718 is a poem title . . .
This post celebrates not only Agnesi (who was born 301 years ago today) but also present-day mathematician and writer Evelyn Lamb who produces lively and informative articles about STEM topics and people. Go here to read Lamb's article about Agnesi for the Smithsonian Magazine on May 16, 2018 -- celebrating Agnesi's 300th birthday.
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Proofs in Poems -- the Sylow Theorems
One of my valuable resources during this year 2020 has been the AMS PAGE A DAY CALENDAR by Evelyn Lamb -- published by the American Mathematical Society.
Today, December 16, Lamb's calendar celebrates a collection of poems by British software engineer Patrick Stevens -- verses that together offer poetic proof of the Sylow theorems about the subgroups of a finite group.
Here is a link to Stevens' collection of "Slightly silly Sylow pseudo-sonnets" and these are the opening lines:
Suppose we have a finite group called G.
This group has size m times a power of p.
We choose m to have coprimality:
the power of p's the biggest we can see.
. . .
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
Mathy Rhymes
Yesterday's note on "A Mathematical Morsel Every Day" -- an American Mathematical Society page-a-day calendar for 2020 assembled by mathematician and writer Evelyn Lamb -- is a fact that involves the first six digits in the decimal expansion of π : 314159 is a prime number.
And, because this is a math-poetry blog, I have turned this information into a syllable-square rhyme:
3 1 4
1 5 9
is a prime!
Perhaps you'd like to explore more: Here's a link to previous blog postings with ideas by Evelyn Lamb. Rhymes often help us to remember; here is a link to postings of rhymes used to remember the digits of π. AND here is a link to some postings that feature square stanzas.
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
Keep Exploring . . .
In addition to its published magazine, Scientific American has a large variety of blogs. One of my favorites was Roots of Unity by mathematician Evelyn Lamb. The blog -- with several hundred postings -- adds to the also-frequent articles that Lamb has contributed to that magazine, In her posting, "What T. S. Eliot Told Me about the Chain Rule," she quotes these lines from "Little Gidding" by T. S. Eliot (published in Eliot's 1966 collection, Four Quartets) and discusses the outcomes of difficulty and confusion coupled with curiosity, energy, and persistence -- frequent ingredients of the process of learning new mathematics.
from Little Gidding by T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Read more at Lamb's blog posting, "What T. S. Eliot Told Me about the Chain Rule."
Monday, November 2, 2020
Voting is on the calendar!
Poetry often surprises us by using familiar words in new ways -- and such is also the case with this cryptarithmetic puzzle -- offered by Evelyn Lamb in her AMS page-a-day calendar for tomorrow, Election Day.
VOTES
+ VOTES
CHANGE
In this puzzle (which Lamb credits to Manan Shah at mathmisery.com) each letter represents a base ten digit, no letter represents more than one digit at a time and no digit can be paired with more than one letter. There are no leading zeroes; there are two solutions. While you are waiting for results from the November 3 US election, this puzzle can help you pass the time in a way that's FUN!
Monday, April 7, 2014
April Celebrates Poetry and Mathematics
In her comment on "Can an Equation be a Poem?" Scientific American blogger Evelyn Lamb (Roots of Unity) mentioned her math-poetry post on March 21 entitled "What T S Eliot Told Me About the Chain Rule." Lamb quotes lines from the final stanza "Little Gidding," the last of Eliot's Four Quartets. Here is the entire stanza with its emphasis on the mysteries of time and perspective, the circular nature of things, the difficulty of discovering a beginning.
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
Mathematician of the Day
On this date, May 16, in the year 1718, the talented Maria Agnesi was born. A great source of historical information about mathematics and mathematicians is MacTutor, a math-history website maintained by the School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. One of the services that MacTutor provides is a list of names and information about mathematicians born on each day of the year. For example, this link leads to the listing for May 16 -- and to lots of info about Agnesi. Here, in a 7x7 syllable-square, is a brief sketch of her life:
This 2018 Scientific American blog posting by Evelyn Lamb discusses a curve from calculus, often called (somewhat misleadingly) "the witch of Agnesi." Previous mentions of Agnesi in this blog may be found at this link.
Friday, January 6, 2017
2017 is prime!
My own relationship with primes also is admiring-- here is an excerpt from my poem, "Fool's Gold," (found in full here) that suggests a prime as a suitable birthday gift:
Select and give a number. I like large primes—
they check my tendency to subdivide
myself among the dreams that tease
like iron pyrites in declining light.
"Fool's Gold" appears in my chapbook, My Dance is Mathematics (Paper Kite Press, 2006); the collection is now out-of-print but is available online here.
Several poems about primes have been included in earlier postings in this blog. For example, here is a link to a 2013 posting of "The Sieve of Erastosthenes" by Robin Chapman. And, for further exploration, here is a link to the results of searching the six years of postings using the term "prime."
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Poetry at JMM -- groups, etc.
Monday, April 4, 2022
April Celebrates both Math and Poetry . . .
April is Math-Stat Awareness Month and here at the American Mathematical Society website are lots of ideas for learning and enjoyment. April also is National Poetry Month and, at this link, Poets.org suggests 30 fun ways to observe the occasion.
Celebrate the ways
that focused language
leads us to new thoughts!
And . . . here are some poetry-with-math links to explore: a Smithsonian Magazine article by Evelyn Lamb; an article in Slate Magazine by Stephen Ornes; a posting by Laura Laing on the Math for Grownups website; from way back in 2009, an article by Shirley Dent in The Guardian.
Enjoy all of these AND, when your time permits, browse or SEARCH this blog!
Friday, April 3, 2020
The Woman Who Bested the Men at Math
Learn more about Philippa Fawcett at this website, "Biographies of Women Mathematicians,: -- maintained by Emeritus Professor Larry Riddle at Agnes Scott College. Riddle's biographic sketch of Fawcett includes a poem of anonymous origin that celebrates her 1890 achievement. Here are its opening stanzas:
Friday, May 15, 2020
A rhyme about a prime
Chebyshev said, and I'll say it again:
There's always a prime between n and 2n.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Are we speaking of "mathematics" or "poetry"?
And a couple of centuries ago there was William Wordsworth -- who also contemplated both poetry and mathematics:
and their high privilege of lasting life,
From all internal injury exempt,
I mused; upon these chiefly: and at length,
My senses yielding to the sultry air,
Sleep seized me, and I passed into a dream.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Logic in limericks
The Implications of Logic by Sandra DeLozier Coleman
That p --> q is true,
Doesn’t say very much about q.
For if p should be false,
Then there’s really no loss
In assuming that q could be, too.