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The Mad Scientists Present: “Scientific and Mathematical Inventions” A Web Quest The Chicken and the Egg and the Caveman and the Space Station! Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The same brainteaser could probably be applied to math and technology. Did the math come out of the technology or are they in fact inseparable. In the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, there is a famous opening scene that depicts our Neolithic ancestors using rocks and sticks as tools and then abruptly transitions to space aged humans of the future living in space colonies. The point being that when the first human picked up a rock and used it as a tool the future was determined. Unfortunately, mankind had to wait 50,000 years until the Greeks, Archimedes in particular, realized that there was a direct relationship between the size of the rock, the length of the arm, and the force of the blow. The mind of man had managed, through pure thought, to harness the forces of the universe for his own purpose. Archimedes, in mathematical terms, could now in a fundamental way predict the outcome of an event before it happened. Archimedes laid down the foundation for the most powerful mathematic tool known to mankind – the Calculus. Unfortunately again, mankind had to wait another 2,500 years for Newton and Leibnitz to work out all the details. Math and technology are interrelated; one describes the other and one predicts the other. All technologies have mathematical roots: computers, the internet, telecommunications; and all math has practical application - one is the language of the other. The Web Quest 1. Read each question carefully 2. Visit each web site and browse the suggested pages 3. Answer the questions Pythagorus and Euclid “It’s all Greek to me” Application of Pythagorean Theorum to Einstein’s theory of special relativity Pythagorus Question 1. Throughout 8th grade math you learn many concepts related to geometry. One in particular is the Pythagorean Theorem, 1st proven by Pythagoras and his followers. In what subject were Pythagoreans most interested? http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/science/math/pythagoras.htm Question 2. Euclid established or invented many of the rules we all use in Geometry today. Euclid wanted to prove things were true by using what? http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/science/math/euclid.htm Example of Euclidian geometric shape Question 3. Pi is an important mathematical invention for understanding circles. Mathematicians in what Empire are credited for figuring out or “inventing” pi? http://www.historyforkids.org/scienceforkids/math/geometry/pi.htm Its Pi or Nothing Question 4. The Indian mathematicians’ biggest invention was the use of the number zero as what? http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/india/science/math.htm “Mathematicians have nothing to shout about” New to Numbers and Shapes Question 5. What is the name of the sequence in which the next number in the series is generated by adding the two previous numbers: (1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55)? http://www.fortunecity.com/emachines/e11/86/natsums.html Question 6. In the 17th century, who showed that if two bodies attract each other with force that was proportional to the square of the distance between them, then the resulting motion of body relative to the other would be a precise mathematical curve called a conic section (that is, a circle, ellipse, parabola or hyperbola)? Although this person was not the first person to suggest that the inverse square law of force was responsible for the motion of the planets, his great triumph was to provide a mathematical proof of the consequences of such a law. http://www.fortunecity.com/emachines/e11/86/solarsys.html#Newton Cotton Gins and Flying Buttresses Practical Applications Question 7. What is a buttress? Who invented it? What function does it serve? http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/architecture/buttress.htm Question 8. What are some famous locations where “flying buttresses” are used? http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/architecture/flyingbuttress.htm Question 9. Relating to mathematics … a size X buttress can support a size Y wall. Find the ration of X and Y? Go to the following site for useful information. http://www.mae.ufl.edu/~uhk/STATICS.html Question 10. What is a cotton gin? Who invented it? What function does it serve? What was the unfortunate side-effect of its invention? http://www.eliwhitney.org/cotton.htm Question 11. Relating to mathematics … how much more cotton could be harvested by using a cotton gin? http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/web/inventor.html Geometry and Perspective Question 12. In which masterpiece did Leonardo Da Vinci use a complex formula based on the relationship 12:6:4:3? (Note: The entire piece measures 6 by 12 units. The wall in the back is equal to 4 units. The windows are 3 units and the recession of the tapestries on the side walls is 12:6:4:3.) http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/udaepp/090/w2/Magee.htm Question 13. What book written by Euclid became the basis of geometry? It was based on the geometry of the Greeks. After it was written, it became the basis of geometry itself. People used the information in the volumes to do a lot of practical things, such as making accurate measurements. For example, building a house, or a computer would be very hard without geometry, as you would have to measure the shapes of the computer. People use geometry to calculate numbers, measure shape, width, and height. http://derrel.net/math/euclid/euclid_inventions.htm Jacquard Loom In 1911, four companies, including the Herman Hollerith Tabulating Machine Company combined to form a larger company known as the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM). Herman Hollerith had devised a way to store information on punched cards. Hollerith borrowed the idea for punched cards from a weaving machine, the Jacquard Loom, which used a card system for ordering weaving operations on a silk loom. A hole in the card was a signal for the loom to perform an operation. In other words the card represented a machine code. The machine code, a simple yes-no, on-off concept is transcribed mathematically as 0 for off, or no, and a 1 for on or yes. This mathematic formulation has brought us personal computers (PC’s), supercomputers, the digital revolution, and the internet. Ones and Zeros Punched card Question 14. Review the following web site. Who, like Hollerith, planned to use punched cards to control an analytical engine? http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/cards/history.html Question 15. Review the following web site. What decimal number does the binary number 101101 correspond to: 3, 4, 17, 45, 53? http://php.about.com/od/programingglossary/qt/binary.htm BONUS In the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, the talking supercomputer is called HAL. Move each letter forward one in the alphabet and see what you get.