A place for everything about math
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How many backups of my backups do I have?
So this is bugging me for a while and I'm just do dumb to get how I solve this, but here's the situation: Given I take a local backup of my system daily and have a retention policy that keeps a backup of the past 7 days each, a backup of the past 4 weeks each and a backup of the past 6 month each. That's either 17 backups or less if you consider some backups being counted as a daily and weekly or as a weekly and monthly. But that's not that important. The interesting part is, that I also take a remote backup of my local backup daily, which has the same retention policy, so it's cascading. Here there is obviously a huge overlap of backups, but I can't wrap my head around, how I calculate this. Is anybody willing and/or interested to solve this for and with me?
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Michel Talagrand Wins Abel Prize for Work Wrangling Randomness
www.quantamagazine.org Michel Talagrand Wins Abel Prize for Work Wrangling Randomness | Quanta MagazineThe French mathematician spent decades developing a set of tools now widely used for taming random processes.
This year's Abel Prize has just been awarded to Michael Talagrand. I didn't knew about his work, but it seems really interesting and he made an effort to make it really accessible both to read and access.
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If "category" has a better name....
Isn't it just "composite"?
Every arrow in category can be composed, the set(or class or whatnot..) of that is composite.
- m.youtube.com The biggest hand calculation in a century! [π Day 2024]
Please note down the new value of pi: 3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375105820974944592307816406286208998628034825342117067982148086513282306...
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Bourbakis' Elements of Mathematics, Algebra 1
In trying to figure out the answer to my homework problem, I came across this volume, which I thought the community might find interesting and/or helpful.
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[Solved] Algebraic Solutions to Graphical Trig Problems?
I've been knocking out the trig problems in this section with minimal difficulty so far, but I've run straight into a brick wall on this "Algebraic" part. I'm asked to find sin(x)=0 between [0,2π). If I graphed the unit circle this would be a trivial exercise to show sin(θ)=0 when θ=0 or π.
Where I have trouble is- I'm very explicitly being told here that the solution is ALGEBRAIC, and I'm struggling to figure out a way to rearrange sin(x)=0 to come up with the known answer. Further, unit circles are not in this chapter, they wouldn't likely ask me to exercise a skill taught in another chapter. What am I missing?
It's not just 31, either. Looking ahead at eg 37, I can easily show sin(-x) = -sin(x) on a unit circle. I could maybe fuck around with inverse trig ratios but those are in section 3- this is only section 1.
Help me out here, drop a hint, share a link: how do I solve sin(x)=0 on [0,2π), but algebraically? I suspect it's something glaringly obvious and/or very very simple I've overlooked.
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[Solved] Inverse Trig Functions Not Giving Consistent Outputs With Each Other?
It's homework help, but I'm not asking for the solution. The problem only asks for cos, sin, tan, cot, csc given sec. I found those pretty quickly on my own, and confirmed solutions with the back of the book.
Where I run into confusion is when I try to find angle theta on my own. Arccos of found cos gives 2.06, arcsin of found sin gives 1.08, and arctan of found tan gives -1.08. Problem givens exclude possibility of the negative angle found by arctan(-15/8), but the other two are possible and conflicting. And why wouldn't they all be the same? I reattempted because there were so many erase marks from trying to figure this out that it was almost illegible.
Am I wrong? Did the book give me a point not on the unit circle or something, assuming I wouldn't try to find theta on my own? Have I used arcfuncs wrong- I checked the domains against the function definitions? Have I found a hole in math?
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What would be the suffix for "group"?
We have "triangle" "rectangle" "pentagon"...etc "tetrahedral" "cube" "octahedron" ..etc
Instead of having to say "group" all the time, like "dihedral group" "cyclic group", if we make it into one word it will sound more like an elementary mathematical object.
What would be a nice suffix for group?
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Simple formula makes prime numbers easy, but a million-dollar mystery remains
www.scientificamerican.com Simple Formula Makes Prime Numbers Easy, but a Million-Dollar Mystery RemainsA generator equation can spit out many prime numbers, but it leaves important mathematical questions unanswered
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Is quaternary actually useful for anything in the real world?
Hello.
I am currently inventing a language, and have created a base 4 number system for it. Unfortunately, I am horrible with numbers, even in decimal. So it was a hard slog. But I finally got there.
It would be great if I could know of any practical applications quaternary has (if any), so I can incorporate it into the language and make it more naturalistic. Thanks.
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What's the word or area of math for a subset within a larger set of paired objects are mixed in a rotated fashion and the number of moves it takes to match all the pairs in the total set partially dep
I feel like this has to be a math/logic thing that has a name already and I wanna know what it's called so I can look it up when I'm no longer extremely drunk.
In this phone game the objective is to get all the people on all the same color floors with as few stops at any floor as possible. When the last few moves look like this, you just have to go through in the right order and only stop at each stop once (except the first/last floor).
But sometimes there's different little sub-sets of pairs inside the bigger set of pairs that are self-contained, and for each one of those there's another floor that has to be started and stopped on to complete that loop. That makes the minimum number of moves to solve: the sum of the number of pairs in both sub-sets together plus the number of subsets. (And only counting the number of pairs in both subsets because if one of the pairs is already matched it won't count for the moves).
So like these two are all one big continuous loop: A-E, B-A, C-B, D-C, E-D and A-B, B-E, C-A, D-C, E-D
And this one has one already matched leaving a single complete loop in need of matching: A-B, B-E, C-A, D-D, E-C
These ones, however, have two loops. one loop that's three floors long (four moves) and one that's two floors long (three moves): A-B, B-C, C-A, D-E, E-D and A-D, B-E, C-A, D-C, E-B
And these ones have one already matched pair, and two sub-sets of two that still need to be matched: A-B, B-A, C-C, D-E, E-D and A-D, B-B, C-E, D-A, E-C
What is this called?
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@math The West Virginia University Provost's Office is recommending closing the MS and Ph.D. programs in Math. It is the \only\ Ph.D. program in Math in the entire state,
@math The West Virginia University Provost's Office is recommending closing the MS and Ph.D. programs in Math. It is the \only\ Ph.D. program in Math in the entire state, and about 10% of all WVU Ph.D.'s are in Math.
Please consider signing this petition to save the program: https://chng.it/yPZDTTsfBk
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A Swift Introduction to Projective Geometric Algebra
YouTube Video
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The Mandelbrot set, I love its chaotic beauty
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set
Here are a bunch of other visualizations: I don't know how artistic or data-driven some of these are, but they look very interesting. I think the nebula-looking one measures how often a point is visited?
!Black and Green mandelbrot set
The Bulbic Mandelbrot Set
https://www.deviantart.com/metafractals/art/The-Bulbic-Mandelbrot-Set-811453986
A Nebulabrot
!Nebula looking mandelbrot set
https://mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/89458/how-to-make-a-nebulabrot
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Can anybody help me understand this question?
So I'm gearing up to take a calculus 1 exam, and this question is on the sample test. My initial thought was that since we are looking for F(9), and F(x) is an antiderivative of f(x), I can just use the integral of the equation of f(x) at 9, which is f(x) = -2x/3 + 5, which, when integrated, becomes -x^2/3 + 5x + 2 (C = 2 because F(0) = 2). Thing is, though, that won't give me any of the answers listed. And even after taking the integral of all of the equations of f(x), I still have no idea how to produce any of the answers in the multiple choice.
I'm super stumped on this one. Any help would be welcome!
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Love math? Donate your spare CPU power to solving mathematical conjectures, no PhD required!
sopuli.xyz BOINC4Science - SopuliDid you know you have the power to discover new anti-cancer drugs 👩⚕️, map the galaxy 🔭, and find new subatomic particles ⚛️ using your computer’s spare computational power? Join us in using the BOINC software to advance the progress of science. We are a newbie-friendly space, please feel free to...
BOINC is a free tool you can download to participate in several different math research projects. It runs on Windows, MacOS, Linux, and even Android. Each project gives you fun stats and graphs about your participation, many of them will even credit you individually for your discoveries (such as finding a new prime) on their website or in their published papers.
Here's a few of the projects available (emoji legend at bottom of post):
🏆💚❤️✖️✒️🔓 Amicable Numbers Independent research project that uses Internet-connected computers to find new amicable pairs. Currently searching the 10^20 range.
🎓🔓✖️ NFS@Home - Lattice sieving step in Number Field Sieve factorization of large integers. Many public key algorithms, including the RSA algorithm, rely on the fact that the publicly available modulus cannot be factored. If it is factored, the private key can be easily calculated.
🏆🎓💚❤️✖️🔓 Numberfields@home - Research in number theory. Number theorists can mine the data for interesting patterns to help them formulate conjectures about number fields.
🔓 ODLK1 - Building a database of canonical forms of diagonal Latin squares of the 10th order
🔓💚❤️ SRBase - Attempting to solve Sierpinski / Riesel Bases up to 1030.
🔓✖️PrimeGrid - Find new prime numbers!
Gerasim@home - research in discrete mathematics and logic control. Testing and comparison of heuristic methods for getting separations of parallel algorithms working in the CAD system for designing logic control systems
🔓✖️ Loda@home - LODA is an assembly language, a computational model, and a distributed tool for mining programs. You can use it to generate and search programs that compute integer sequences from the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences® (OEIS®). The goal of the project is to reverse engineer formulas and efficient algorithms for a wide range of non-trivial integer sequences.
🔓🎓Rakesearch - The enormous size of the diagonal Latin squares space makes it unfeasible to enumerate all its objects straightforwardly in reasonable time. So, in order to discover the structure of this space, sophisticated search methods are needed. In RakeSearch project, we implement an application that picks up separate pairs of mutually orthogonal DLSs, which allows to reconstruct full graphs of their orthogonality.
🔓✒️ Ramanujan machine - Discover new mathematical conjectures
Legend:
🔓 - Publishes data openly and regularly. Note many projects publish papers detailing the results of their work, this icon means that they regularly publish the source materials as well/the results of the computation in an open fashion.
🏆 - Credits individual crunchers for discoveries, such as finding a new black hole or prime number
🎓 - Sponsored by major university or research institute.
💚 - Supports NVIDIA GPU/graphics card (all projects should be assumed to support CPU unless otherwise stated)
❤️ - Support AMD GPU (all projects should be assumed to support CPU unless otherwise stated)
✖️ - Supports OS X (all projects should be assumed to support Windows & Linux unless otherwise stated)
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I think I'll ditch WolframAlpha
ChatGPT will gobble up every symbolic manipulation task I give to it. At worst, sometimes I have to check its output and point out anything weird, then it'll correct it.
I'm writing pages over pages of scary differential equations and the damn thing is saving me lots of time on it. And everything checks out! I wonder about GPT 4, since it is supposed to give correct answers without help as often as the average calculus student...
- yewtu.be The Remarkable Story Behind The Most Important Algorithm Of All Time
The Fast Fourier Transform is used everywhere but it has a fascinating origin story that could have ended the nuclear arms race. This video is sponsored by 80,000 Hours. Head to http://80000hours.org/veritasium to sign up for their newsletter and get sent a free copy of their in-depth career guide. ...
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Simple elo formula?
The regular elo formula is complicated.
The most basic elo formula is win = 1 points, draw = 0, lose = -1. Which is a little too basic.
I looked around and couldn't find a 'medium difficulty' elo formula. Anyone have a medium difficulty proposal?
Regular elo formula:
The Elo rating system embodies this by using a formula that changes a player's rating by adding K(S-E) to his rating each time. K is a constant that is the same for all players; the higher it is, the more easily your rating changes. S is the score of the player in a match (+1 for a win, 0 for a loss). E is the expected score of the player in the match. Against a weak player, it is close to 1 since you expect a strong player to beat a weak player most of the time. Conversely, against a stronger player, it is close to 0. You can calculate E using the formula E_A = 1/(1+10(R_B-R_A/400)), where E_A is the expect score of player A with rating R_A when faced with player B with rating R_B.
- x.st Visual Sum of Cubes
This article discusses a ‘visual’ derivation of the formula for 1³+2³+…+n³.
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How to Take the Factorial of Any Number
YouTube Video
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Beginner-friendly derivation of an alternative expression of the gamma function.
- yewtu.be How to lie using visual proofs
Three false proofs, and what lessons they teach. New notebooks: https://store.dftba.com/collections/3blue1brown/products/mathematical-quotebook-notebook Help fund future projects: https://www.patreon.com/3blue1brown An equally valuable form of support is to simply share the videos. Here's a nice sh...
- www.hillelwayne.com 1/0 = 0
Have a tweet: img {border-style: groove;} I have no idea if Pony is making the right choice here, I don’t know Pony, and I don’t have any interest in learning Pony.1 But this tweet raised my hackles for two reasons: It’s pretty smug. I have very strong opinions about programming, but one rule I tr...
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Infinite Hotel Paradoxes: the original, and the sequel.
yewtu.be Infinite Hotel ParadoxesHilbert’s Infinite Hotel Paradox is a thought experiment which demonstrates that when we enter the realm of actual infinity, we must check our intuitions at the door. In this video, we look at Hilbert's Hotel Paradox and then consider a sequel to the story, where the hotel manager from the Potential...
- yewtu.be Big Factorials - Numberphile
Large factorials and the use of Stirling's Approximation. Featuring Professor Ken McLaughlin. More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Professor McLaughlin is based at Colorado State University: https://www.math.colostate.edu/~kenmcl/ We filmed this during his time at the Mathematical Scie...
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History of Mathematics
history-of-mathematics.org History of Mathematics Project | HomeHistory of Mathematics Project virtual exhibition
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[OC] Geometry from another universe (interactive)
Walk around a house that exists in a non-Euclidean space called a 3-sphere.
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How Big Can Balanced Trees Get? (Fibonacci, AVL Trees, and Binet's Formula)
YouTube Video
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Higher Math for Beginners (Mostly Physicists and Engineers)
archive.org Higher Math for Beginners (Mostly Physicists and Engineers) : Zeldovich Y. and Yaglom I. : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet ArchiveThis book is a joint attempt of a physicist and a mathematician to write an entirely new type of book for future scientists and engineers.…The purpose of...
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A new paper gives instant improvements to the known running times of such algorithms that compute the volume of a convex shape or sample from an assortment of machine learning models.
www.quantamagazine.org Statistics Postdoc Tames Decades-Old Geometry ProblemTo the surprise of experts in the field, a postdoctoral statistician has solved one of the most important problems in high-dimensional convex geometry.
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Thue-Morse Adjacent Fractal (made from turtle graphics on Mathematica)
imgur.com Thue-Morse Adjacent Fractal - Album on ImgurDiscover the magic of the internet at Imgur, a community powered entertainment destination. Lift your spirits with funny jokes, trending memes, entertaining gifs, inspiring stories, viral videos, and so much more from users.