Math from Alpha to Omega
Math from Alpha to Omega
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Orbiting the Mandelbrot Set
In this video, we look at a few of the main unsolved problems surrounding the Mandelbrot set. These turn out to be related to a Fourier series that traces out the boundary of the fractal.
zhlédnutí: 1 425

Video

A New Proof of Ptolemy's Theorem?
zhlédnutí 166Před 21 dnem
In this video, we use complex numbers to prove Ptolemy's theorem. With some algebra tricks, we reduce the proof to checking a few very simple cases, from which the general result follows.
Pythagorean Picture Frames and Hyperbolas
zhlédnutí 123Před měsícem
In this video, we explore a simple-sounding geometry problem that ends up having unexpected connections to Pythagorean triples.
How Euler Factored 4,294,967,297 (and Other Massive Numbers)
zhlédnutí 56KPřed měsícem
In the 1630s, Fermat conjectured that 2^2^n 1 was always prime, although he didn't have the tools or the patience to check beyond the first 5 examples. In this video, we explore how Euler managed to disprove that conjecture, and find some other crazy factorizations in the process.
Lucky Cosine 7th Powers
zhlédnutí 143Před měsícem
In this video, we use properties of roots of unity to find the sum of the 7th powers of cos(2π/7), cos(4π/7), and cos(6π/7).
A Sum of Cubes of Cubes
zhlédnutí 126Před měsícem
In this video, we use a few algebra tricks to evaluate a sum involving 9th powers.
Proving combinatorial identities with integrals
zhlédnutí 70Před měsícem
In this video, we prove a couple identities involving combinations by writing the sums as integrals.
The Power Tower of Terror
zhlédnutí 149Před měsícem
In this video, we use a bit of calculus to show that a tower of 20 √2's lies between 1.999 and 2 (by hand, of course!).
31.4 Days of Pi: Digamma and generalized harmonic numbers
zhlédnutí 72Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). By differentiating the gamma function, we extend harmonic numbers beyond integer indices.
31.4 Days of Pi: Generalizing the Gaussian integral
zhlédnutí 111Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). By using polar coordinates, we find some formulas for the beta function and compute some of its values.
31.4 Days of Pi: Symmetry in the gamma function
zhlédnutí 51Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). We first use the factorization of 1/Γ(z) to prove Euler's reflection formula. After that, we give a rough sketch of the proof of the duplication formula.
31.4 Days of Pi: Factoring the gamma function
zhlédnutí 108Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). Here, we sketch a proof of the Weierstrass factorization of 1/Γ(z).
A one-line proof of a combinatorial identity
zhlédnutí 57Před 2 měsíci
In this video, we use a generating function to prove an identity in one line (with a few extra lines of explanation). The identity turns out to be related to finite differences of polynomials.
31.4 Days of Pi: The gamma function
zhlédnutí 974Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). We introduce the gamma function and look at a few of its properties, including its relation to the Gaussian integral.
31.4 Days of Pi: Euler's sine product and the Riemann zeta function
zhlédnutí 103Před 2 měsíci
This video is part of a series on pi, in order to celebrate Pi Day (Pi Month on this channel). Here, we show how Euler computed the sum of reciprocals of even powers. Along the way, we find several surprising identities involving pi.
31.4 Days of Pi: Vieta's product and the golden ratio
zhlédnutí 140Před 2 měsíci
31.4 Days of Pi: Vieta's product and the golden ratio
31.4 Days of Pi: Madhava's infinite series
zhlédnutí 162Před 2 měsíci
31.4 Days of Pi: Madhava's infinite series
31.4 Days of Pi: Cones, Cylinders, and Spheres
zhlédnutí 48Před 2 měsíci
31.4 Days of Pi: Cones, Cylinders, and Spheres
31.4 Days of Pi: Archimedes' Approximation
zhlédnutí 110Před 2 měsíci
31.4 Days of Pi: Archimedes' Approximation
p-adic Numbers, Part 2: The p-adic Absolute Value
zhlédnutí 115Před 3 měsíci
p-adic Numbers, Part 2: The p-adic Absolute Value
p-adic Numbers, Part 1: Introduction
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 7 měsíci
p-adic Numbers, Part 1: Introduction

Komentáře

  • @dino2808
    @dino2808 Před 10 dny

    ohh this was a very good watch. thank youu!

  • @academyofuselessideas

    Cool explanation! It reminded me of the Jonathan Coulton's song!

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před 9 dny

      Thank you! I hadn't heard that song before, but it's pretty entertaining.

    • @academyofuselessideas
      @academyofuselessideas Před 9 dny

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmega It is fun! another fun math themed song is Booty do math by Kirby Krackle

  • @mihaleben6051
    @mihaleben6051 Před 14 dny

    Thanks euler. I can calculate x^i noe

  • @2kreskimatmy
    @2kreskimatmy Před 15 dny

    beautiful argument

  • @SamOlisson-tf1ic
    @SamOlisson-tf1ic Před 23 dny

    WE run a Swift rup to Time béguin znswear clip swat repeat old shame 0.31210333229823>+__4#=88332298231023

  • @nicolascamargo8339
    @nicolascamargo8339 Před 28 dny

    Impresionante

  • @enragedpumpkin
    @enragedpumpkin Před 28 dny

    I found a video to fall asleep to... your voice is really soothing. you deserve more views

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před 28 dny

      If being a math teacher doesn't work out, I'll try going into math ASMR. Thanks for the feedback!

  • @Kumar-ho8cj
    @Kumar-ho8cj Před měsícem

    Dude why don't you try animating this People like animation

  • @epsilonxyzt
    @epsilonxyzt Před měsícem

    Loader please! You don´t talk for yourself but for listener. Your voice needed to reach to your listener!

  • @christopherrice891
    @christopherrice891 Před měsícem

    What type of numbers are those in the thumbnail where it says 20 digits and where it says 98 digits?

  • @user-ky5dy5hl4d
    @user-ky5dy5hl4d Před měsícem

    Place an infinite amount of points on a circumference of a circle. Then pick any point of your choice on the circumference. Add one to that point or subtract one from that point. How far have you moved on the circumference in radians?

    • @AmmoGus1
      @AmmoGus1 Před 20 dny

      0

    • @user-ky5dy5hl4d
      @user-ky5dy5hl4d Před 19 dny

      @@AmmoGus1 Correct. Because infinity is not a number.

    • @zihaoooi787
      @zihaoooi787 Před 4 dny

      0. since there is an uncountably infinite amount of points on a circle, there can be no “next point” or “preceding point”.

    • @user-ky5dy5hl4d
      @user-ky5dy5hl4d Před 3 dny

      @@zihaoooi787 Correct, because also infinity is not a number.

  • @michaelpenklis7580
    @michaelpenklis7580 Před měsícem

    With the advancement of modern computer and Mathematicians out there will they ever find a bigger prime than 2^82,589,933-1

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      Almost certainly, but the Mersenne primes get rarer and rarer as the exponent increases, so it takes a ton of computation to find each new one.

    • @michaelpenklis7580
      @michaelpenklis7580 Před měsícem

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmega and one other aspect that I just realised that 2239*36887 = 82,589,993. Witch makes 82,589,993 a semi prime number

  • @Math_Analysis
    @Math_Analysis Před měsícem

    i'm really appreciate your videos! it's really to my taste! i love maths too

  • @Math_Analysis
    @Math_Analysis Před měsícem

    why expanding the terms ends up the 6 non-1 roots to have the same coefficients? is it coincidence? or there are some explanation?

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      It's because of the symmetry. If you expand (z+z^(-1))^7, you'll get 7z^5 and 7z^(-5), for example. Then when you plug in the three roots of unity ζ, ζ^2, ζ^3 for z, you'll get 7ζ^5, 7ζ^2, 7ζ^3, 7ζ^4, 7ζ, and 7ζ^6.

    • @Math_Analysis
      @Math_Analysis Před 6 dny

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmegaOh, thank you. That's about the reduced residue system

  • @aaaab384
    @aaaab384 Před měsícem

    What's the difference between finding a proof like Euler did (among millions of possible proofs) and just finding a prime factor (among millions of possible factors)?

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones Před měsícem

    Damn those margins: none of them is wide enough to contain "6700417" (and its many many prime factors...)

  • @wyattstevens8574
    @wyattstevens8574 Před měsícem

    With all the primes they had in the early 18th century, 1+2^32 would still have been possible- they'd just need all primes less than 1+2^16!

    • @Xanthe_Cat
      @Xanthe_Cat Před měsícem

      That’s only 6500 or so trial divisions up to the square root; Fermat’s 1 mod 2p method (attributed here to Euler, but Fermat undoubtedly knew it as well) reduces the work to 210 or so; and Lucas’s refinement narrows that to just 99 primes needing to be checked. (But how do you get that list of thousands of primes up to 2^16 in the first place? Well, recursively obviously, by trial divisions up to the square root, which is 2^8 for the largest possible primes. It’s still a mammoth amount of work, just to check one number.) Fermat either didn’t have the appetite to conduct two hundred or so trial divisions, or he made an error when he got to the case of 5·2^7+1. It seems impossible to know which is true at this late date.

    • @wyattstevens8574
      @wyattstevens8574 Před měsícem

      @@Xanthe_Cat I think he says here that at the time, they knew all primes =< 10^5- because referencing this list, they'd have more than enough primes to factor a number as big as (or bigger than) this 1+2^32 I started with.

  • @StCharlos
    @StCharlos Před měsícem

    Was Euler just a Google search engine or a GPT AI back in his days? • Kept doing impossible things. • Generated tons of equations and theories. • Everyone just sent their questions to him, eg Lagrange, Goldbach, Bernoulli(s), German princesses, etc

    • @Gordy-io8sb
      @Gordy-io8sb Před měsícem

      He was extremely gifted, definitely. He had to have had an IQ of 160 or 170, maybe even higher.

  • @ffggddss
    @ffggddss Před měsícem

    At 6m40s et seq, yes, it's true that you can't replace the "2" in Mersenne's expression with any larger integer, a>2, because you'll always get a multiple of (a-1); but all you have to do is notice that when a=2, you can "say" you're dividing by (a-1) = 1, and retain that divisor in the formula. You will then sometimes get primes that are "pseudo-Mersenne," or "generalized-Mersenne" numbers, which can also be interesting. M(a,p) = (aᵖ - 1)/(a - 1); a,p > 1 a ≠ square or higher power of any integer, and p = prime Fred

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss Před měsícem

      In particular, M(a,2) = a + 1, which is uninteresting, leading to a prime iff a is 1 less than a prime; but for k > 2, there are interesting cases, the first being M(3,3) = 13 (prime) Some others are: M(3,5) = 121 = 11² [note that 11 ≡ 1 mod (2k = 2·5)] M(3,7) = 1093 (prime) M(3,11) = 88573 = 23·3851 M(5,3) = 31 (prime) M(5,5) = 781 = 11·71 M(5,7) = 19531 (prime) M(6,3) = 43 (prime) M(6,5) = 1555 = 5·311 M(6,7) = 55987 (prime) etc.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      @@ffggddss That's a fair point - thank you for mentioning that. The same trick with orders will work there, too, but the numbers grow much faster, so it's not nearly as helpful as with 2^p-1.

  • @takyc7883
    @takyc7883 Před měsícem

    can anyone explain the step from the 3rd to 4th line at 4:10?

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      In general, a sum of odd powers can always be factored. If you divide x^n+y^n by x+y for n odd, you'll get x^(n-1)-x^(n-2)y+x^(n-3)y^2-...+y^(n-1).

    • @jamesknapp64
      @jamesknapp64 Před měsícem

      To go into it more deeply. Consider A^3 - B^3 = (A - B) x (A^2 + A x B + B^2 ) Numerically lets take some big numbers 31^3 - 26^3 = (31 - 26) x (31^2 + 31 x 26 + 26^2) 29791 - 17576 = 12215 = 5 x (961 + 806 + 676) = 5 x 2443 and we see it works out This can be done with ANY power such as A^12 - B^12 = (A - B) x (A^11 + A^10 x B + .... + B^11) Now if we have an odd power we can swap the sign of B; i.e. (-B) A^odd - (-B)^odd = A^odd - (-1)^odd x B^odd = A^odd + B^odd and we have a factorization with sums of odd powers. Thus we could say that 31^3 + 26^3 = (31 + 26) x (31^2 - 31 x 26 + 26^2) and we can check 47367 = 57 x 831 So you have 2^28 + 1; since 28 has an odd factor (28 = 4 x 7) we see that we could write it as 2^28 + 1^28 = (2^4)^7 + (1^4)^7 = 16^7 + 1^7 and use the sum of odd powers trick 2^28 + 1 = 16^7 + 1^7 = (16 + 1) x (16^6 - 16^5 x 1+ 16^4 x 1^2 - 16^3 x 1^3 + 16^2 x 1^4 - 16 x 1^5 + 1^6) or 268435457 = 17 x 15790321 namely the key feature was that 17 divides 2^28 + 1 Since we are looking for primes of the form 2^N + 1 ; we notice if N has any odd factor; then 2^(N/odd factor) + 1 will be a factor of 2^N + 1; example 2^20 + 1 since 5 is a factor of 20; then 2^(20/5) + 1 = 2^4 +1 (=17) will be a factor of 2^20 + 1 (=1048577; and yes 1048577 = 17 x 61681) and things like 29^416 + 14^416 ; which is about a 609 digit number ; we can notice that 416 = 13 x 32 Thus 29^416 + 14^416 = (29^32)^13 + (14^32)^13 ; and thus 29^416 + 14^416 is divisible by 29^32 + 14^32 ; which is a 47 digit number.

  • @martinepstein9826
    @martinepstein9826 Před měsícem

    Cool vid, subscribed. I'm not convinced by the proof at 10:20. Sure, if b is a multiple of d then a^b = 1 mod p. But the question is whether a^b can equal 1 mod p when b is not a multiple of d. When you say "the first p-1 powers of *a* can be split evenly into these cycles" you're assuming the conclusion, namely that d divides p-1. Also, since your argument never uses the assumption that d is the _smallest_ positive integer with *a*^d = 1 mod p its definitely missing something. The key is that if d does not divide p-1 and we don't get a cycle then that means p-1 lies between two multiples of d. So p-1 equals a multiple of d plus an integer r strictly between 0 and d (this is the division algorithm). This implies a^r = 1 which contradicts the fact that d is the smallest such positive integer.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      You're right that I skipped over some details there; I did that just to give an intuitive explanation of what's going on. The fact that d is the least exponent with that property is what tells us that the circle has d points on it. Then the only powers corresponding to 1 are the multiples of d. I was debating whether to include a more rigorous proof, but I decided against it in favor of a more visual argument.

    • @stanleydodds9
      @stanleydodds9 Před měsícem

      A much simpler and more correct proof of this fact would be to let b be the smallest positive integer for which a^b = 1 (mod p), and then write d = qb+r by Euclidean division (so 0 <= r < b). Now we have that 1 = a^d = a^(qb+r) = (a^b)^q a^r = 1^q a^r = a^r (mod p) so a^r = 1 (mod p), but b is minimal. If r were positive, then r < b would contradict b minimal, so in fact r = 0. Hence d = qb, so b divides d.

  • @muskyoxes
    @muskyoxes Před měsícem

    Most embarrassing conjecture ever. The first nontrivial element breaks it

    • @brightblackhole2442
      @brightblackhole2442 Před měsícem

      "yeahhh so i looked at the first few of them, they're all prime. and the next one is too big to figure out for now, so i'll just leave it there and say it's an open problem"

    • @vassilispetrides8841
      @vassilispetrides8841 Před měsícem

      Proof by lack of counterexample

    • @keescanalfp5143
      @keescanalfp5143 Před měsícem

      ​@@vassilispetrides8841, yeah , true , until - until someone makes himself ready to take the trouble .

    • @FishSticker
      @FishSticker Před měsícem

      This will be what people say about Riemann hypothesis lmao

    • @muskyoxes
      @muskyoxes Před měsícem

      @@FishSticker Well no, there's nothing trivial about the points we've found on the critical line

  • @krystofsedlacek195
    @krystofsedlacek195 Před měsícem

    Great video! I am looking forward to new ones if you are planning to continue. Maybe next time, I would suggest cranking up the speed of the visuals a bit, as it can get a bit annoying when waiting for the text to finish writing itself. Otherwise, really an awesome video. Good luck!

  • @roiproutii
    @roiproutii Před měsícem

    at 8:02 the french use to do maths is so different from today's that even as a french maths student i dont understant what he meant

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      Ouais, c’est souvent très difficile de comprendre ce que les anciens mathématiciens voulaient dire. Leur façon d’expliquer les choses était beaucoup plus compliquée que la nôtre. Si vous essayez de lire les textes des Grecs anciens, c’est encore pire !

  • @gametimewitharyan6665
    @gametimewitharyan6665 Před měsícem

    This was a pretty nice problem

  • @ron-math
    @ron-math Před měsícem

    Lovely video! Subscribed!

  • @DarkTouch
    @DarkTouch Před měsícem

    we should rename "fermat's little theorem" to "eulers little theorem that fermat didn't prove" just because euler needs more publishing/discovery credits...

    • @GolumTR
      @GolumTR Před měsícem

      Leibniz had a proof. There’s no doubt that Fermat had a proof too bc all it takes is induction and binomial coefficients. Just expand (a+1)^p and take advantage of the fact that pCi is divisible by p unless i=0 or p.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      Although the argument is simple, I'm not so sure that Fermat actually had a proof of it. Things that seem obvious now weren't so obvious 400 years ago.

    • @azzteke
      @azzteke Před měsícem

      @@GolumTR What is pCi supposed to be?

    • @samueldeandrade8535
      @samueldeandrade8535 Před měsícem

      ​@@azzteke people use nCk meaning "n numbers, choose k", nCk := n!/(k!(n-k)!) I prefer the notation C(n,k)

    • @Xanthe_Cat
      @Xanthe_Cat Před měsícem

      A lot of people claimed things that seemed obvious without proof, which were actually obvious; only if a proof is entirely lacking and not obvious do we use the word conjecture instead. Fermat’s little theorem was proved so readily it seems extremely likely he found an induction proof along the lines that one of the other commenters suggested above. Lastly, Euler doesn’t need anything else named after him! FLT is just a special case of Euler’s totient theorem.

  • @Xanthe_Cat
    @Xanthe_Cat Před měsícem

    If you read Fermat’s correspondence more closely, it appears all of Fermat’s conjectures about Fermat numbers, Mersenne numbers, the method for quickly finding factors of the form 2kp+1, and Fermat’s little theorem all date from the year 1640 - not the 1630s. Fermat like Euler found some factors of rather large Mersenne numbers by way of disproving their possible primality. There’s a very helpful article which examines the various letters extant from Mersenne and Fermat which were sparked by a set of inquiries from Frénicle de Bessy: C. R. Fletcher, A reconstruction of the Frenicle-Fermat correspondence of 1640, Historia Mathematica 18 (1991), 344-351.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      Thank you very much for mentioning this; that's an interesting article, and I admit that I overlooked some of Fermat's results and conjectures. The excerpt I took from his letter was indeed from 1640, and that appears to be the first mention of Fermat's little theorem. It's also true that he found factors of large Mersenne numbers using the 1 mod 2p idea. I suppose the reason he didn't do the same for 2^2^n+1 was that he was going based off examples, rather than proofs, and the small examples led him to believe that those numbers were always prime. However, he first conjectured that 2^2^n+1 is prime in the 1630s, not 1640 (at least according to a source published by the MAA). I will have to do some more work to track it down. Thanks again for the thought-provoking comment!

    • @Xanthe_Cat
      @Xanthe_Cat Před měsícem

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmega In terms of Fermat’s testing of 2^2^5+1 and 2^2^6+1 (which he actually had evaluated numerically), for the latter the problem looks intractable by trial division but F6 turns out to have a relatively small factor. F6 was factored twice in the 19th century, separately by Clausen and Landry; again the article by H.C. Williams, How was F6 factored? Math. Comp. 61 (1993), 463-474, is a nice insight into how Landry might have achieved the result knowing that factors existed (Lucas had proved F5 and F6 were composite several years before). It is not quite so easy to write off the case of F5, since it is only 210 trial divisions up to the square root using Fermat’s or Euler’s method. The fact Fermat missed finding the 5·2^7+1 factor points to two possible conclusions: (1) he made an error in his long division when he reached 641; (2) he did not try looking for factors at all. I think it’s hard to establish which is true at this distance. Edited to add: I’ve had a look through the Fermat volume of correspondence (the 1894 publication by Gauthier-Villars) and I can’t see anything resembling investigations into Mersenne or Fermat numbers prior to 1640, so I am curious what source MAA had for the 1630s claim, if you can easily lay your hands on it.

    • @danielbriggs991
      @danielbriggs991 Před měsícem

      I was gonna say, what is the prime factor of 2^2^6+1? But then I just wrote a Python script incorporating the idea from the video instead.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      @@Xanthe_Cat There was a series of articles posted on the MAA website about Euler's work, and one of them was on the Fermat primes. The author says that Fermat mentioned the conjecture in "several of his letters during the 1630s and 1640s." You can find it on the Euler Archive - it's called "How Euler Did It".

    • @Xanthe_Cat
      @Xanthe_Cat Před měsícem

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmega I’ve already read it - if that’s the article by Ed Sandifer you’re citing on the factorisation of F5? He doesn’t source his claim for 1630s and 1640s, and given the general tenor of the discussion that sounds like he’s mistaken which decades Fermat was writing letters about Fermat numbers - you’ll find letters to Pascal and Kenelm Digby which cite Fermat numbers, but there’s nothing in the 1630s. Edited to add dates for letters: Pascal, letter 79 (29 August 1654) Digby, letter 96 (June 1658) Drawbacks for reading Fermat’s letters: (1) You have to be able to read French and Latin to some degree (I know enough to make rough translations), and (2) The compilation of letters is obviously extremely complete. (Not.) However, there doesn’t seem to be anything with regards to perfect numbers prior to 1640, and it was Frénicle’s challenge to Fermat in 1640 (in a letter relayed to Fermat by Mersenne) that seemed to prompt Fermat into the research that yielded Fermat’s little theorem and the conjectures about the 2^x-1 and 2^x+1 sequences, that x had to be prime in order for 2^x-1 to be prime, and x had to be a power of 2 for 2^x+1 to be prime.

  • @ChefPenguino0
    @ChefPenguino0 Před měsícem

    I really loved this video😊 My feedback to you is that you could add a bit more enthusiasm to your vids and not pause a lot. I don’t want to seem mean lots of love 🥰

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      Thanks - I appreciate the feedback!

    • @robert-skibelo
      @robert-skibelo Před měsícem

      @@MathFromAlphaToOmega I disagree with this suggestion. I like the cool calm tone of your commentary and the complete freedom of your videos from Hollywood tinsel (music, shouting, visual gimmicks, etc.). The pace is right for me: I last studied mathematics several decades ago and need to pause occasionally to make sure I've fully grasped what you've just said, which is good. Finally and more trivially, it's a tremendous pleasure to find a presenter who pronounces foreign names reasonably correctly and doesn't just assume that his audience will run a mile when they see a quotation in French. Keep up the good work. Subscribed.

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      @@robert-skibelo Thank you for the kind words, and I'm glad you enjoyed the video! My goal is always to make the math interesting in its own right, without needing to add anything over-the-top. Your comments show me that people appreciate that, and it's very encouraging!

  • @Maths_3.1415
    @Maths_3.1415 Před měsícem

    Nice 🤠

  • @samueldeandrade8535
    @samueldeandrade8535 Před měsícem

    That's more interesting than showing the "infinite tetration of √2 is 2". I am so used to watch 4wful math channels that I never thought about this variation of the problem.

  • @phylI
    @phylI Před 2 měsíci

    This is my first time seeing the actual definition of the gamma function and i feel like, thanks to your video, I understood it and its uses quite well, thank you😁

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před 2 měsíci

      Thank you - I really appreciate it! There's a lot more to say about it, but I figured this was a good place to start.

  • @gurkiratsingh7tha993
    @gurkiratsingh7tha993 Před 2 měsíci

    Amazing content!!!! Can I work with you and be your animator and animate this maths just like 3b1b??

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před 2 měsíci

      Thank you! I would definitely be interested in that. You can send me an e-mail at alpha2omegamath at gmail and I'd be happy to discuss it with you!

  • @seeker2071
    @seeker2071 Před 2 měsíci

    Please check research paper titled ' Development of Calculus in ancient India ' by K. Ramasubramanian & M.D.Srinivas

  • @ron-math
    @ron-math Před 2 měsíci

    Beautiful math here!

  • @Mathematic-10
    @Mathematic-10 Před 2 měsíci

    Hi , thanks for everything, do you have any account in instagram or something.

  • @Kuvina
    @Kuvina Před 2 měsíci

    It's like calculus before calculus! Also I love how you mentioned map projections!

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks! And yes, it's really impressive how much ancient mathematicians accomplished with such basic tools. For example, there's a tablet that's almost 4000 years old with sqrt(2) correct to 6 digits. I have no clue how they managed to do that.

  • @Judith-2001
    @Judith-2001 Před 7 měsíci

    I’ll comment cause no one else has💀

    • @akhlakunuddin225
      @akhlakunuddin225 Před 7 měsíci

      I'll comment 2nd cause no one has😂 Carry on

    • @Maths_3.1415
      @Maths_3.1415 Před měsícem

      ​@@akhlakunuddin225 I will comment 3rd because 3 is a prime number.

    • @BurningShipFractal
      @BurningShipFractal Před měsícem

      I comment 4th because 4 is a square of 2

    • @MathFromAlphaToOmega
      @MathFromAlphaToOmega Před měsícem

      I will comment 5th because 5 is my favorite number between 4.9 and 5.1.