The SAT Question Everyone Got Wrong

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 11. 2023
  • How an SAT question became a mathematical paradox. Head to brilliant.org/veritasium to start your free 30-day trial, and the first 200 people get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
    Special thanks to our Patreon supporters! Join this list to help us keep our videos free, forever:
    ve42.co/PatreonDEB
    I invented Snatoms, a molecule modeling kit where the atoms snap together magnetically. Try it at ve42.co/SnatomsV
    Huge thanks to Dr. Doug Jungreis for taking the time to speak with us about this SAT question.
    Thanks to Stellarium, a wonderful free astronomy simulator - ve42.co/Stellarium
    Thanks to Newspapers.com, a database of historical newspapers - ve42.co/Newspapers
    ▀▀▀
    References:
    Summary of this problem by MindYourDecisions - • Why did everyone miss ...
    More cool math about this problem by Kyle Hill - • The SAT Question NO ON...
    Discussion of a solar day by MinutePhysics - • Why December Has The L...
    Murtagh, J. (2023). The SAT Problem That Everybody Got Wrong. Scientific American - ve42.co/SATSciAm
    United Press International (1982). Error Found in S.A.T. Question. New York Times - ve42.co/SAT-NYT
    Yang (2020). What's the hardest SAT math problem that you've seen? Quora - ve42.co/SATQuora
    Coin rotation paradox via Wikipedia - ve42.co/CoinParadox
    Simmons, B. (2015). Circle revolutions rolling around another circle. MathStackExchange. - ve42.co/CircleRoll
    Sidereal time via Wikipedia - ve42.co/SiderealWiki
    Solar Time vs. Sidereal Time via Las Cumbres Observatory - ve42.co/SiderealLCO
    Images & Video:
    Zotti, G., et al. (2021). The Simulated Sky: Stellarium for Cultural Astronomy Research - ve42.co/Stellarium
    Newspapers from 1980s - 1990s via Newspapers.com - ve42.co/Newspapers
    SAT Practice Test via the College Board - ve42.co/PracticeSAT
    Revolution Definition via NASA - ve42.co/RevolutionNASA
    Revolution Definition via Merriam-Webster - ve42.co/RevolutionWebster
    Earth motion animation via NASA - ve42.co/OrbitNASA
    Satellite animation via NASA - ve42.co/SatNASA
    ▀▀▀
    Special thanks to our Patreon supporters:
    Adam Foreman, Anton Ragin, Balkrishna Heroor, Bernard McGee, Bill Linder, Burt Humburg, Chris Harper, Dave Kircher, Diffbot, Evgeny Skvortsov, Gnare, John H. Austin, Jr., john kiehl, Josh Hibschman, Juan Benet, KeyWestr, Lee Redden, Marinus Kuivenhoven, Max Paladino, Meekay, meg noah, Michael Krugman, Orlando Bassotto, Paul Peijzel, Richard Sundvall, Sam Lutfi, Stephen Wilcox, Tj Steyn, TTST, Ubiquity Ventures
    ▀▀▀
    Directed by Emily Zhang
    Written by Emily Zhang and Gregor Čavlović
    Edited by Peter Nelson
    Animated by Ivy Tello and Fabio Albertelli
    Filmed by Derek Muller
    Produced by Emily Zhang, Han Evans, Gregor Čavlović, and Derek Muller
    Thumbnail by Ren Hurley
    Additional video/photos supplied by Getty Images and Pond5
    Music from Epidemic Sound

Komentáře • 18K

  • @duckyfam9012
    @duckyfam9012 Před 2 měsíci +3021

    “I was amazed how badly it’s worded,” literally half of the SAT problems.

    • @LJ3783
      @LJ3783 Před měsícem +42

      Y’all are overcomplicating a simple problem as an excuse for flunking out of community college

    • @NicholasAndre1
      @NicholasAndre1 Před měsícem +161

      @@LJ3783I think there’s a greater theme here - there’s a certain hubris to the belief that questions such as this represent “intelligence.” There are…certain large tech companies that exclusively leverage SAT type philosophies in hiring to the exclusion of allowing nuance, and it doesn’t actually work that well in my opinion. Problems in the real world often don’t look like an SAT question and more often there literally isn’t a “correct” answer. If we condition people on these sorts of problems they don’t end up adapting well to an engineering trade off, nor are people who view the world from an SAT lens necessarily good at solving trade-offs in the context of a team. I think this type of criticism is that the SAT quite obviously fails to support its own philosophy of the existence of “correct answers” when the wording is wrong.
      I don’t say that to explain away my life failures, rather I say that because I have learned the importance of hiring people in a more nuanced way that allows for these different dimensions. Not sure if you’ve ever tried to work with an arrogant math PhD before 😂

    • @justarandomguy8694
      @justarandomguy8694 Před měsícem +85

      ​@@LJ3783not really. The wording here is objectively bad, and dare I say, wrong.

    • @LJ3783
      @LJ3783 Před měsícem +4

      @@justarandomguy8694I'd say that's the real issue, it comes down to semantics.

    • @cameronschyuder9034
      @cameronschyuder9034 Před měsícem +53

      @@LJ3783if the wording is bad enough that most everyone got it wrong, then perhaps there needs to be an evaluation instead of brushing it off as semantics. Usually with tests like these it is expected for some people to get it wrong. But not a vast majority. If you say things poorly, then it makes sense that you get misunderstandings.
      Also, you cannot flunk out of community college if you’re not even in college. These exams are meant to loosely determine how ready you are for college. I’m not sure what your first comment was meant to say

  • @KevinJDildonik
    @KevinJDildonik Před 5 měsíci +20568

    To all the 1st posters: CZcams takes up to 15 minutes to gather data on a video before showing stats. Everyone in the first 15 minutes all think they're first.

  • @NoraOlson-ct7nr
    @NoraOlson-ct7nr Před měsícem +836

    Having the small circle rotating 3 times with the camera rotating is the best intuitive explanation of what's going on I've ever seen for something like this

    • @thatonecrossiant22
      @thatonecrossiant22 Před měsícem +8

      It was the perfect explanation

    • @anonymousguy5694
      @anonymousguy5694 Před 23 dny +3

      I solved the question at the start of the video by pausing the video. MF I got 4 and then wondering the whole video why did people mark 3💀

    • @juhaniu6371
      @juhaniu6371 Před 11 dny +2

      @@anonymousguy5694 because they just wanted to answer something and there was no checkbox for the answer 4? so they assumed they are missing something and marked 3.

    • @EmmaSquire-ks9nu
      @EmmaSquire-ks9nu Před 10 dny

      I didn't watch the video. But it is 3 right? Because the small circle would spin 3.141592653589etc x(radius x2) for about 6.28 before going a full rotation, while the bigger circle would spin closer to a distance equal to 18.84.

    • @yolanda6392
      @yolanda6392 Před 7 dny

      @@EmmaSquire-ks9nuWatch it and you’ll see it’s 4. But 3 from the perspective of inside the circle (i think that’s how you word it)

  • @monopolyking879
    @monopolyking879 Před měsícem +663

    I am currently 6 weeks from earning a Purdue Aerospace Engineering BS, I have completed the requirements for a physics minor, ive taken 2 graduate level astronomy courses and a graduate level Space Traffic Management course that dealt with sidereal time on every assignment, but this is easily the best conceptual explanation of sidereal time I have ever seen. Genuinely incredible educational content, I'm blown away.

    • @magnuslarsson337
      @magnuslarsson337 Před měsícem +4

      Hear, hear!

    • @Worms_Pro
      @Worms_Pro Před měsícem

      Keep It Simple Stupid
      KISS

    • @The_E_Lord
      @The_E_Lord Před měsícem +4

      Damn I wish to do aerospace/astrophysics too

    • @rose_allen
      @rose_allen Před měsícem +6

      Out of curiousity, how often do people pronounce it side real and how often do you hear cider eel? I'd seen the word before and assumed it was a compound word - and Astrophysicists seem like exactly the kind of people to read a word and understand its meaning before hearing it out loud.

    • @tmst2199
      @tmst2199 Před měsícem +3

      @@rose_allen You're hilarious.

  • @5MadMovieMakers
    @5MadMovieMakers Před 5 měsíci +12626

    This was a mentally challenging video to watch first thing in the morning. I'm awake now

    • @nirbhaykumarchaubey8777
      @nirbhaykumarchaubey8777 Před 5 měsíci +71

      Wait, it is night

    • @krishmishra514
      @krishmishra514 Před 5 měsíci +77

      It is 10 PM where I live and now I can't sleep😂

    • @zayansaifullah2008
      @zayansaifullah2008 Před 5 měsíci +36

      Bruh it’s 16:46 where I am
      Got back from school and just did some homework now I’m eating snacks then I will play games

    • @willson8394
      @willson8394 Před 5 měsíci

      You're mentally challenged

    • @QuantyzIGuess
      @QuantyzIGuess Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@zayansaifullah2008 same

  • @felixp535
    @felixp535 Před 5 měsíci +1812

    That part about the circle rotating around the triangle was mind-blowing. You instantly understand why it's not the same if the circle rolls on a flat line or rolls on a curved line

    • @Renegade605
      @Renegade605 Před 5 měsíci +118

      That was the "aha" moment for me too.

    • @misterscottintheway
      @misterscottintheway Před 5 měsíci +11

      This

    • @argelovec6216
      @argelovec6216 Před 5 měsíci +14

      There were 3 aha moments for me

    • @Marco-xz7rf
      @Marco-xz7rf Před 5 měsíci +50

      if you divide the straight line in half and start to roll along it at the "top" to the end you then can make a 180, roll around to the "bottom" and then go in the other direction, make another 180 and keep going until you reach your starting point. These two 180 needed for the direction change add the 4th rotation 🤯

    • @NickyG-NZ
      @NickyG-NZ Před 5 měsíci +36

      The earth around the sun was a fantastic example for why the frame of reference matters, especially with the graphic

  • @Derik-fk2bu
    @Derik-fk2bu Před 3 dny +60

    We’re always hearing that income inequality is getting worse. Is that the case? It depends on what time frame you’re looking at. If you’re just looking at the current administration, that’s certainly true. But these kinds of changes occur all the time. If you’re saying over the long run, no, I wouldn’t think so I've seen a lots of positive post about MR SAM DEYMON I find stock.

    • @FlorenceArlo
      @FlorenceArlo Před 3 dny +2

      With Mr SAM DEYMON you anywhere can take classes to learn to trade and also earn along the process .

    • @weronikaszymon6283
      @weronikaszymon6283 Před 3 dny +4

      Just ''buy the dip''. In the long term it will payoff. High interest rates usually mean lower stock prices, however investors should be cautious of the bull run, its best you connect with a well-qualified adviser Mr Sam Deymon to meet your growth goals and avoid blunder.

    • @MichaelOCanno
      @MichaelOCanno Před 3 dny +3

      Mr Sam is really good and so content, you can reach out to him.

    • @Derik-fk2bu
      @Derik-fk2bu Před 3 dny +4

      He's TE LEG RAM...

    • @Derik-fk2bu
      @Derik-fk2bu Před 3 dny +4

      @samdeymon53....that's it = 4 advise.

  • @-ADOI-
    @-ADOI- Před 13 dny +37

    I was so confused because of the word "revolution," "1" is what I thought the answer was because of that

  • @TupperWallace
    @TupperWallace Před 5 měsíci +1074

    The 1872 novel “Around the World in Eighty Days” had a plot that depended on this kind of situation. Phileas Fogg traveled around the world eastward, against the earth’s rotation. Though initially he thought he’d missed the 80 day deadline by some hours, in fact only 79 days had passed in London. One extra rotation had passed beneath his feet. He won the prize, married the girl and lived happily ever after.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Před 5 měsíci +8

      Fun!

    • @davidklein1245
      @davidklein1245 Před 5 měsíci +59

      That is what first came to mind when I first saw this problem. I didn't immediately jump to 4 as the answer, but I knew 3 wasn't correct.

    • @Mark73
      @Mark73 Před 5 měsíci +14

      There's a recent TV version starring David Tennant that I remember that from.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Mark73 Really? I might have to check that out

    • @BoneyMB
      @BoneyMB Před 5 měsíci

      Glad about him.

  • @4RILDIGITAL
    @4RILDIGITAL Před 5 měsíci +2725

    Three of them got it right by saying that the question was wrong.

    • @wqters5772
      @wqters5772 Před 5 měsíci +25

      likebot more

    • @prashantmishra9985
      @prashantmishra9985 Před 5 měsíci +14

      1k likes within 5 minutes? Wow!

    • @EzraHaviland
      @EzraHaviland Před 5 měsíci +65

      Also 3 is still a correct answer to the problem it’s just badly worded. So everyone who answered 3 still got it right.

    • @stevejones1318
      @stevejones1318 Před 5 měsíci +22

      The question is incomplete. It should ask how many rotations does the small circle make, on its centre point, to rotate exactly once around the large circle.

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@stevejones1318​they forget an A. If there was one more A in the question, it would be correct.

  • @Awkward_migrant
    @Awkward_migrant Před měsícem +11

    This explanation is the best i have found. The idea of the distance the centre of the planet circle travels and then deriving ratios makes the most sense to me and your graphics helped me to grasp this. It's fascinating. Not too mention the perspective element influencing the answer!! What i didn't realise is that the extra rotation is accounted for as well if observing from the perspective from the centre of the "sun" circle by the fact that the observer has to rotate once to continuously observe the "planet" circle

  • @aprskgp
    @aprskgp Před měsícem +7

    This concept is quite important while solving Rotation problems in Physics.
    Instantaneous Centre of Rotation, given that it is pure rolling i.e. there is no slipping at the point of contact.
    It at this centre of instanteous rolling the entire circle or rigid body is pure rotating.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @Darth_Insidious
    @Darth_Insidious Před 5 měsíci +1705

    I was confused for a second until I realized that if you set the radius of the big circle to 0, or in other words rotate the smaller circle around a point on its circumference, it takes 1 full rotation for the circle to end up back at the start.

    • @willdurneybenson
      @willdurneybenson Před 5 měsíci +121

      this comment helped me solidify ny understanding thank you

    • @dr.albekhan8640
      @dr.albekhan8640 Před 5 měsíci +46

      Thanks. This is a great way to think about it! ❤❤

    • @solimao1236
      @solimao1236 Před 5 měsíci +45

      Genius comment, thank you!

    • @08-quocat6
      @08-quocat6 Před 5 měsíci +13

      finally! i got it

    • @Nowolf
      @Nowolf Před 5 měsíci +12

      That idea helped me as well

  • @Shepard-Thomas
    @Shepard-Thomas Před 5 měsíci +998

    In college, I took a poetry class and once had an answer marked wrong on a test. Confident in my response, I reached out to the poet themselves, who affirmed I was right and even communicated this to my professor. Despite not being a fan of poetry, that moment made me quite proud!

    • @QYXP
      @QYXP Před 5 měsíci +42

      Did the professor change your grade?

    • @Sciguy95
      @Sciguy95 Před 5 měsíci +183

      ​@@QYXPI had a question marked wrong on a chemistry test that the professor refused to accept was actually right. The head of the chemistry department came to our class and embarrassed him in front of everyone showing why I was right and he was wrong.

    • @VADemon
      @VADemon Před 5 měsíci +5

      literature tests: q.e.d.

    • @pongmaster123
      @pongmaster123 Před 5 měsíci +35

      @@Sciguy95 very cool, but also unprofessional

    • @Derzull2468
      @Derzull2468 Před 5 měsíci +80

      @@pongmaster123 We don't have the full backstory and never will, it might have been well deserved. Don't feel offended for some random obtuse chemistry teacher that may or may not even exist.

  • @fpgaguy
    @fpgaguy Před měsícem +5

    I appreciate every one of your videos, they always make me think, and sometimes make my head hurt. Thank you.

  • @LittleNatNix
    @LittleNatNix Před 10 hodinami +1

    I stared at the thumbnail long enough and actually got it!! Haven't watched the video yet, but I basically calculated the circumference of both circles in my head and then it became pretty obvious.
    C= 2πr
    Circle A: 2*π*1=2π
    Circle B: 2*π*3=6π
    Thus, after completing one revolution, Circle A will have covered 2/6 or 1/3 of Circle B's circumference. If it covers 1/3 of the total distance it needs to cover in one revolution, then by common sense, it'll need 3 revolutions to complete the total distance.
    It's not really the way one would write the working in an exam or anything, but it's just my thought process while trying figure out how the heck the question works 👍

  • @Spondre
    @Spondre Před 5 měsíci +902

    I loved the "I hope so" answer from Doug at the end. It highlights the most important lesson I learned during my education: "I might be wrong."

    • @hieronymusbutts7349
      @hieronymusbutts7349 Před 5 měsíci +22

      I feel like I already had that lesson before education. I feel like the most important lesson for me - that helped me grapple with how to be effectively wrong - is how to think in terms of probability than binaries.

    • @zqzj
      @zqzj Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@hieronymusbutts7349❤

    • @glennpearson9348
      @glennpearson9348 Před 5 měsíci +31

      A harder lesson still is, "I might be wrong and I'll never know it." This is why people who fear the Scientific Method really shouldn't. It's also a primer in the Scientific Method, perfectly demonstrating why the goal isn't to prove a hypothesis is correct. Rather, the goal is to prove a hypothesis is NOT correct. Similarly, it demonstrates why the strongest theories are those derived from inductive reasoning (multiple specific cases lead to a generalized conclusion), rather than deductive reasoning (a generalized case leads to multiple specific conclusions).

    • @CrosSeaX
      @CrosSeaX Před 5 měsíci +3

      Agreed! The most important thing I learned when learning math or physics or any objective knowledge is that by admitting the probability your are wrong is the best you can do to advance in those fields. I love to think that the physics, as we human know and define it, is always more correct than before but never (at least in the foreseeable future) completely right.

    • @myuzu_
      @myuzu_ Před 5 měsíci +3

      I always thought this way, but I learned in the working world that if you acknowledge that you could be wrong other people will assume you're wrong.

  • @8Smoker8
    @8Smoker8 Před 3 měsíci +684

    "I just put 3 down. I figured that's what they wanted". So depressing if you stop and think about it.

    • @Magst3r1
      @Magst3r1 Před 2 měsíci +59

      That's what the school system teaches you

    • @p2imal
      @p2imal Před 2 měsíci +54

      ​@@Magst3r1 Which is a good lesson for the real world: Learn to pick your battles. When it's a trivial issue, don't waste your time raising a big stink about any concerns you have. Just do what you're expected to do and move on.

    • @jholsapple2918
      @jholsapple2918 Před 2 měsíci +3

      You (as I) initially analyzed from a gear-ratio perspective. The problem is more subtle. (see below addnl comments)

    • @oching4
      @oching4 Před 2 měsíci

      life in general is exactly that. on repeat. this is why most nerds who make it are autistic or agreeable or naiive and basic. others get depressed. and society deteriorates.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Před měsícem +6

      except 3 is a correct answer - the problem that the 3 students who "corrected" the SAT - was that they overthought the question - in fact "revolution" as more than one meaning - and i would have interpreted it the way the questioners intended it -
      on a flat surface - the rolling coin that starts with the head upright - will have made 1 full rotation/revolution/roll (when the circumference has fully played out) when it's upright again - but put it on a curved surface - and that no longer applies
      when rolling a quarter around a fixed quarter - the coin has NOT made a full rotation when George's head is upright again at the bottom of the fixed coin - if you mentally straighten out the edge of the fixed coin - you'll realize that the head of the rolling coin is UPSIDE DOWN when it's on a straight line
      if at the start you placed a dot on the edge of the rolling coin where it was touching the other - that dot would not be touching until it has gone all the way around to the top of the fixed coin

  • @martinfaust2783
    @martinfaust2783 Před měsícem +1

    Love this video. Good explanation of this math magic. Great job.

  • @josrthorst6316
    @josrthorst6316 Před měsícem +3

    This is really interesting! I initially interpreted it as the revolutions answer (1) and was immediately very thrown off by the answer options. Very cool to learn about this type of math problem!

  • @gregnixon1296
    @gregnixon1296 Před 4 měsíci +701

    It makes the story even better to know that one of the students who found the SAT error became a mathematician.

    • @EagleOxford
      @EagleOxford Před 4 měsíci +21

      They should have offered him a job making the tests.

    • @FlorenceSlugcat
      @FlorenceSlugcat Před 4 měsíci +54

      The fact that he corrected a mistake from the very test that they use to determine if you were good at math probably is a good point to bring up to get hired or accepted for a job or university
      Its also nice to see that they aknowledged their mistake, admitted it to everyone in news, and dismissed the question from everyone’s test. They have admitted to everyone their mistake, knowing well that it would impact their reputation for having made the mistake
      Only 3 people in the whole country sent a letter to correct them, likely not many noticed or cared about the mistake. They could just “ignored it and pretend it didnt happen” like so many goverments and corporations do regularly. Even more so considering people were not sharing everything instantly using internet on a global scale

    • @zzzzzzz1zzzzzzzzzz1z
      @zzzzzzz1zzzzzzzzzz1z Před 4 měsíci +4

      dude if he became a social worker i'd be more fascinated

    • @jakemccoy
      @jakemccoy Před 4 měsíci +18

      @@FlorenceSlugcat Removing the question was improper and created more inaccuracy in the scores. The question was part of the test and consumed time that could have been used on other problems. At least some students failed to answer other questions correctly because they wasted time on this question. For example, a great math student could have spent 5 minutes on this question totally stumped that no correct answer was there. Now, that great math student gets this question thrown out and also gets some other questions wrong because of time. So, any student who answered 3 should have been given full credit. The test makers who allowed this faulty question also administered a faulty correction.

    • @gregnixon1296
      @gregnixon1296 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@jakemccoy I agree the question should have been thrown out. When every student in one of my classes misses a question, I eliminate the item. This rarely happens, however.

  • @forkmonkey
    @forkmonkey Před 5 měsíci +1192

    Another fun way to conceptualize the N+1 is to ask what happens if the circumference of B is 0. A still has to rotate around that point, one time. Great video.

    • @davidbesant
      @davidbesant Před 5 měsíci +62

      Brilliant. Wish I'd thought of that!

    • @startibartfast42
      @startibartfast42 Před 5 měsíci +48

      I thought of it as a circle rolling three times along a straight line, and then one more time as the straight line is curled into a circle itself

    • @fra_dp
      @fra_dp Před 5 měsíci +26

      That's actually a great example.

    • @AsterothPrime
      @AsterothPrime Před 5 měsíci +21

      Yes because by measuring from the center of the circle, you are offsetting by the value of the radius. So you essentially just add up each circle's radius to get the number of rotations of circle A. So if Circle B's radius was zero, the centre of circle A still has to travel around it's own radius of 1.

    • @budle89
      @budle89 Před 5 měsíci +6

      this helps a lot!! thanks!

  • @SuperJm1200
    @SuperJm1200 Před 7 minutami

    Good job, very clear. My professor in computer science used to say that if you are a good programmer and you have an error in your code chances are you are usually off by 1 somewhere.

  • @bytecode5834
    @bytecode5834 Před 7 dny

    Fantastic video, thanks for sharing you knowledge

  • @Tim3.14
    @Tim3.14 Před 5 měsíci +660

    One way to see the extra rotation -- shrink the inner circle to radius approximately 0, so it's like a thin wire. The circle still has to do a rotation to roll around the wire, even though the wire's circumference is negligible. (The rotation disappears from the "circle's perspective" because the "camera" does that one rotation along with it.)

    • @niels6186
      @niels6186 Před 5 měsíci +19

      You’re clever 👌

    • @abhirammadhu2973
      @abhirammadhu2973 Před 5 měsíci +25

      That’s some pro level thinking🔥

    • @munkhjinbuyandelger
      @munkhjinbuyandelger Před 5 měsíci +1

      but why is it one? why cant it be anything else?

    • @rambbler
      @rambbler Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@munkhjinbuyandelger10:10

    • @mmeettwwoo
      @mmeettwwoo Před 5 měsíci +8

      Where is the paradox, when started rotating around same sized coin, point under neck of face picture was touching, after halfrotation at 180 deg where narrator started speaking again, point above head of face picture was touching the stationary coin, that means half rotation, full rotation will be when same point that was touching the stationary coin will again touch it, and in same sized coins, that comes when coin reaches starting point again. So where is paradox?? Cant they see that point that was touching at start, touches the circle again at whole 360 rotation, in same size coins. What is confusion??

  • @ZEROBRICKS
    @ZEROBRICKS Před 5 měsíci +2018

    I learned about this problem when calculating gear ratios of planetary gearboxes, using exactly same 1:3 ratios.

    • @Dont_Read_My_Picture
      @Dont_Read_My_Picture Před 5 měsíci +4

      Don't read my nameDon't read my name

    • @hexagonal7708
      @hexagonal7708 Před 5 měsíci +9

      The same thing happened to me

    • @DrDipsh1t
      @DrDipsh1t Před 5 měsíci +43

      That was my exact thought was gear ratios lol.

    • @venanziadorromatagni1641
      @venanziadorromatagni1641 Před 5 měsíci +30

      Learned about this when we talked about the moon slowing down its rotation in high school and I realised it still made 1 rotation around its own axis for every lunar month, so it could always show the same face towards Earth.

    • @dminsanebros
      @dminsanebros Před 5 měsíci +4

      I was just wondering this. It is only for planetary gears or all gears?

  • @user-bt8mh1it2h
    @user-bt8mh1it2h Před měsícem

    What an awesome video,full of knowledge and images, lots of explanations,very good job😊

  • @stevenr5534
    @stevenr5534 Před měsícem +16

    This was an excellent video. Not only did you explain the coin paradox and sidereal time, but you also showed some of the pitfalls in experimental, survey, and test design.

  • @ElectroBOOM
    @ElectroBOOM Před 5 měsíci +10258

    This was a great video! Blew my mind when I realized how I was wrong!! Good to know question wordings can be so important, eh?! 😁😉

    • @ThapeloMKT
      @ThapeloMKT Před 5 měsíci +242

      I was confident that I was right, but because of that, I was then confident I was wrong

    • @iamdigory
      @iamdigory Před 5 měsíci +217

      I'm just glad I got the correct wrong answer

    • @ninthjeans3749
      @ninthjeans3749 Před 5 měsíci +10

      same

    • @michaelharrison1093
      @michaelharrison1093 Před 5 měsíci +32

      Are you familiar with Symmetrical Sequence Component theory created by Charles Fortescue in 1928? In this work he proves why 3n+1 harmonics are positive sequence (rotate in the same direction as the fundamental) and why 3n-1 harmonics are negative sequence. This comes down to this very coin paradox problem

    • @stephensirait5146
      @stephensirait5146 Před 5 měsíci +6

      what was you trying to imply here bro 🤣

  • @atticuscpchan
    @atticuscpchan Před 5 měsíci +395

    4:20 Fun fact, the SAT actually tells you to assume all diagrams are drawn to scale unless otherwise indicated. Definetally made my life easier when I took it.

    • @scramjet7466
      @scramjet7466 Před 5 měsíci +13

      Thats convenient. In Jee they purposefully distort it

    • @kernelsmith
      @kernelsmith Před 5 měsíci +6

      It didn't help you in the Writing and Language section...LOL, JK😂

    • @techgeek2625
      @techgeek2625 Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@scramjet7466According to my experience most of them are close, if not to scale. Anyways scale doesn't really matter for the questions in JEE

    • @attsealevel
      @attsealevel Před 5 měsíci +3

      techgeek2625 was right - whether it was drawn to scale (or not) - it didn't matter in this case. The outcome is always the same.
      total # of rotations = ratio between inner circle to outer circle + 2πr

    • @techgeek2625
      @techgeek2625 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@attsealevel Idk much about the questions of SAT, but judging by the level of SAT Maths, maybe some questions will be easier to solve with diagrams which are to scale.

  • @0biwan7
    @0biwan7 Před měsícem +4

    aaaauuuuggghh!!! i was going crazy because i thought the answer was 4 and it wasnt one of the options. took me waaayyyy too long to realize that the reason everyone got it wrong was that the right answer wasnt one of the options.
    thanks for making drawing the connection to solar vs sidereal time and the practical applications in GPS time. i really appreciate how you relate the abstract puzzles and theoretical questions to real world situations. but this also opens up a whole can of worms about the equation of time vs the mean solar day and how the shortest day of the year, the day of latest sunrise, the day of earliest sunset are three different days.

    • @qoph1988
      @qoph1988 Před 6 dny

      High intelligence, low self-confidence. Tragic problem

  • @joeterp5615
    @joeterp5615 Před měsícem

    This got my mind really spinning! 😉
    So I did my own little experiment, but using rectangles. I found the number of rotations for same-sized rectangles is the same as for the same-sized sized circles (i.e., the quarters) shown in the video. I used a couple Chipotle napkins that were sitting next to me on the couch lol. The outer napkin rotated 2 full times to get back to the original location. And sure enough, when I figured out how to alter my perspective to that of the inner napkin, there was only rotation from that perspective. This was a fun simple way to reinforce a key principle in this video.

  • @lexxynubbers
    @lexxynubbers Před 5 měsíci +511

    In 1976 my maths teacher gave us the 2 (identical) coin problem. She insisted the answer was 1. I got 2 coins out and demonstrated that it was 2, but she could not be persuaded. It seems like this was a common mistake amongst teachers of that era.

    • @orangenostril
      @orangenostril Před 5 měsíci +136

      Literally seeing it in front of her and _still_ insisting it's not true is wild

    • @thehandleiwantedwasntavailable
      @thehandleiwantedwasntavailable Před 5 měsíci

      She sounds like a useless teacher.

    • @erikthomsen4007
      @erikthomsen4007 Před 5 měsíci +63

      @@orangenostril
      "Your coins must be faulty. The answer *is* 1. Now go and sit down!"

    • @bunface
      @bunface Před 5 měsíci +55

      Still true today for many teachers, especially in Asia. Teachers are often drilled to "teach what's correct" but never consider what happens when they are wrong. I've been teaching for the past 10 years and the way I look at teaching is, I don't teach. I share and learn at the same time. I share what I know with my students, and encourage them to seek their own versions of the knowledge, and I feel great when they come back with alternative perspectives to the same subject, or other versions that they've found. Then we explore the differences together. This fosters an atmosphere of collaborative learning and students are much more willing to engage the subject, because they own the learning process. For me, I grow with them.

    • @olivergottkehaskamp3369
      @olivergottkehaskamp3369 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@bunface 💖

  • @user-rx4wo7il2g
    @user-rx4wo7il2g Před 4 měsíci +761

    Thinking about this yesterday and I realized the extra rotation becomes intuitive if you shrink the large circle down to a point, and rotate around that. Even though the diameter of the circle it's rotating around is zero, the "small" circle still has to make a full rotation to return to its starting point.

    • @korkow
      @korkow Před 4 měsíci +115

      Imo this is a more immediately intuitive explanation than what was in the video!

    • @kwimms
      @kwimms Před 4 měsíci

      This is a dumb fake question to convince you that the Earth is turning. These two clowns couldn't solve the time of day.

    • @user-ow1ui5pw6z
      @user-ow1ui5pw6z Před 4 měsíci +12

      I also thought of this same explanation

    • @brettgregory7799
      @brettgregory7799 Před 4 měsíci +10

      Excellent!

    • @crussty
      @crussty Před 4 měsíci +31

      Great visualisation. This should be pinned

  • @Drighiz
    @Drighiz Před měsícem +2

    The way I'd think about it (yes, I figured it was 4) is: if they were cogs, both circles rotating around their axle, the small one would do 3 rotations and the big one would do 1. In order then to fix the large circle, we can imagine rotating the sheet of paper once in the opposite direction, so that the large circle would look still. So that would make it 4 rotations for the small one: 3 in the paper and 1 because the paper itself (the reference system) is rotating.

  • @humilulo
    @humilulo Před měsícem

    i've learned more stuff from textbooks or reading on the internet than i have in school. i've seen 'sidereal' for more than a decade and never had any good understanding of what it was nor even how it was pronounced. now i learned both. thanks!!

  • @Cosmic9999
    @Cosmic9999 Před 5 měsíci +610

    It will never fail to amaze me how seemingly simple questions can turn out to go against common sense when studied further, and then can be used to add to knowledge and laws that are used to greatly change or enhance our world.

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy Před 5 měsíci +3

      This is why common sense is not a thing

    • @anteshell
      @anteshell Před 5 měsíci +37

      @@GameTimeWhy That's not at all what common sense is. Common sense is an ability to intuitively solve simple everyday problems such as "It is cold outside, I will wear warm clothes" or "it is raining, it is better to dry clothes inside". It is certainly not something you can use to solve complex math.

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Před 5 měsíci +9

      ​@@anteshellTrue. The major problem with "common sense" is that too many people equate "I think that...." with "It is common sense that....".

    • @sumermuktawat
      @sumermuktawat Před 5 měsíci +2

      This channel information starts where common sense end. And there are many people who dont have common sense to start with

    • @Mallchad
      @Mallchad Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@anteshellThis is a a hand-wavy explanation.
      Common sense is usually used to describe something that should be simple and intuitive and known by many people within a given area. This video shows why common sense doesn't map easily to reality and we should study things further.
      This also isn't complex math its basic geometry, the fundemental of math.

  • @stevedietrich8936
    @stevedietrich8936 Před 4 měsíci +1018

    I came up with the answer, 3, in a second or two, and then wondered "how could that possibly be incorrect". I spent the next 18 minutes learning how. Great video!

    • @888cromartie
      @888cromartie Před 4 měsíci +41

      An actual honest response, lol at those who said they instantly concluded it was 4 rotations

    • @enzolomongiello4497
      @enzolomongiello4497 Před 4 měsíci +10

      It is the kind of problems which when you see the solution you feel dumb because the solution is so obvious

    • @clarkkent4665
      @clarkkent4665 Před 4 měsíci +9

      You weren't incorrect

    • @jamiefa2000
      @jamiefa2000 Před 4 měsíci +5

      i was surprised cause my intuitive answer was 4 by looking at the circles but it was not an option so i thought 3 XD

    • @abinash446
      @abinash446 Před 4 měsíci +23

      The answer is 3 only the video is useless

  • @justinjames3028
    @justinjames3028 Před měsícem +1

    This was fascinating. I would not have caught the error but I imagine there were plenty of others who either thought the answer should have been 4 but didn’t contact the SAT; or thought it was 4 but talked themselves out of it.
    These three just happened to be both confident enough and motivated to contact the SAT.

  • @tc6818
    @tc6818 Před 2 měsíci +449

    10:44 The circle traveling on the outside of the triangle helped me visualize the solution best.

    • @TinMan-kd2gv
      @TinMan-kd2gv Před 2 měsíci +16

      As an engineer, I made the same answer mistake just like anyone else till realized yeah it is the center of the circle ⭕️ which + 1 because it is running outside then yeah it makes sense.

    • @JB-nf8nk
      @JB-nf8nk Před 2 měsíci +2

      I knew this was the case because I visualized it immediately, but I still didn't know the answer until he said it increases the distance traveled by exactly one circumference of the circle, then I was ashamed of myself for forgetting curvature introduces an extra rotation. I had learned this during mechanical engineering school and missed my opportunity to say "I know the answer!"

    • @stix562
      @stix562 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The part here is that it's rotating around not with it like gears then they both become flat lines and 3 to 1 ratio. How is that to blow ones mind.

    • @anirbansingha6723
      @anirbansingha6723 Před měsícem

      Yeah

  • @paparmar
    @paparmar Před 4 měsíci +489

    I'll always remember when in my freshman astronomy lab, we directly measured the sideral period of the earth. The rooftop-dome telescope was aimed at a patch of sky with it's tracking motor turned off. Over the course about 20 minutes, each of us would peer through the eyepiece (no computer screens back then) and pick out a star that came into view, quickly making a sketch of it amongst its neighbors. When our chosen star passed behind the crosshair (we made sure no one rotated the eyepiece) we each started our stopwatch. Once everyone had their turn, we labelled each of our watches and put them in a cabinet. Then next night we all returned, and one-by-one, observed our star slide across the view, and stopped our stopwatch when it again went behind the crosshair. Mine read 23 hrs, 56 min, 3.92 sec. Across the class, we were all within a quarter second of the actual value. Yes, really simple (and dependent on there being two clear nights in a row), but how many people can say they've done that?

    • @johnwilson1094
      @johnwilson1094 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Yes! Sidereal time! Thanks

    • @gabrielgonzalez1993
      @gabrielgonzalez1993 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Beautiful

    • @ohyou_6599
      @ohyou_6599 Před 4 měsíci +1

      me, I've done that with timelapses over 24 hours. really cool stuff.

    • @jaelwyn
      @jaelwyn Před 4 měsíci +3

      More schools should do this, and similar experiments that require minimal outlay but reconfirm "known" results. For example, I would expect most schools to be able to find someone due north/south who could set up a vertical pole and measure the length of the shadow at solar noon on a specific day. Which, with some trig, is all you need to confirm that the Earth is curved (at least along a north/ south path), and the circumference (if you assume a sphere).

    • @xDXD-xo2qi
      @xDXD-xo2qi Před 4 měsíci

      wow ur ancient, did u shake hands with trexes back in the day?

  • @pikastudios2850
    @pikastudios2850 Před 12 dny +11

    Here’s my guess, if the wheel A is revolving like a wheel then you divide both the circles circumference. Circle A has a radius of X and circle B has a radius of 3X, to find the circumference we multiply the radius by two and then times PI, making Circle A have a circumference of 2XPi and circle B having a circumference of 6X PI, so it should be 3

    • @mateofyt
      @mateofyt Před 11 dny +6

      Exactly! They should open a dictionary. It's easy to solve anything if you change the question to fit your answer. By definition of a revolution, the number 3 is correct. Perfect analogy are gears or a wheel because as circle A the wheel would make only 3 REVOLUTIONS on circle B's circumference line, it literally can't make 4. Just because circle A looks like it made an extra full revolution from our perspective, doesn't mean it did. The only reason it looks like so is because, relative to us, circle A is literally getting pivoted full 360° once every time it travels circle B's full circumference. At 180° point circle A looks to us like a flipped version of what it looks like to circle B. If you make an upright square image travel forward on any circles circumference, it would literally get flipped for us at the half way point without making even a fraction of a revolution, that's why for that circle the image stays upright the whole time.

  • @johnnyshell2839
    @johnnyshell2839 Před měsícem

    The explanation you gave just showed your point. Pov determines internal and external proportion. +1 and -1

  • @jonathanbost8427
    @jonathanbost8427 Před 4 měsíci +227

    I paused the video with the question before the multiple choice answers came up. I debated with myself but decided the answer was 1 (because of the term "revolution"). I was disheartened when seeing the choices, deciding it must be 3, and then excited again when you said the answer was not an option. Then disappointed again when you said it was 4, and then excited again when you said 1 was a possible answer . . . a real rollercoaster of a video.

    • @anainesgonzalez8868
      @anainesgonzalez8868 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Literally same❤

    • @vineethbharadwaj8187
      @vineethbharadwaj8187 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Exactly. Rotation and Revolution are pretty different imo. Pretty ambiguous

    • @chrissherlock1748
      @chrissherlock1748 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Revolutionary comment

    • @wayneerichsen
      @wayneerichsen Před 3 měsíci +1

      That coin rotated once in the first demo, I don't understand how it was 2? With its head up, it went around once before its head was up again.

    • @vicpnut1
      @vicpnut1 Před 3 měsíci

      Was mostly with ya till 10mins….then i felt like a toddler afterwards 🤦🏼‍♂️🤷🏼‍♂️😜

  • @patrickbateman69420
    @patrickbateman69420 Před měsícem +2

    This really hurt my brain until the whiteboard explanation. Now it's so clear!

  • @SeanMilligan-kj5ok
    @SeanMilligan-kj5ok Před 7 dny

    This was amazing. Thank you.

  • @glennpearson9348
    @glennpearson9348 Před 5 měsíci +414

    There's been a couple of videos on this particular SAT problem before. I'm an engineer and a bit of a math nerd myself, so I understood the point the other video was trying to make. However, Derek uses both computer graphics and real-world cut-outs to explain things, and that sets this video apart from the others. Very elegant, as always, Derek. Love your vids!

    • @gruanger
      @gruanger Před 5 měsíci +2

      I haven't watched this video yet, but based on the thumbnail, it is one that super annoys me because the answer depends on perspective, how you view the english language. I should go find my comment from the past, but first I should watch the video. I just know I will get annoyed when I do, lol

    • @Redmenace96
      @Redmenace96 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Thank you, for a great YT comment!

    • @gruanger
      @gruanger Před 5 měsíci

      haha, good point@@Redmenace96

    • @Alpha_Online
      @Alpha_Online Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@gruangerhave you watched it yet?

    • @gruanger
      @gruanger Před 5 měsíci

      Watched it :) The video didn't annoy me but it is the problem I remember@@Alpha_Online

  • @Mr.MoonRabbit
    @Mr.MoonRabbit Před 5 měsíci +189

    There is an anecdote of a professor in the math department of the university I went, who wrote in a final exam of calculus something like "do you dare to calculate the sum of the series?" to which a student answered "No". The professor said he had to give the student full marks since the answer wasn't wrong, and he started being veeery careful in the wording of the exams

    • @bvenable78
      @bvenable78 Před 5 měsíci +44

      That happened to my junior year English teach in high school (but a year before I took her class). The exam question was "describe the book 'The Scarlet Letter'". As I'm sure you've already guessed, one student wrote a 5 paragraph essay about the size and shape of the book, the various artistic properties of the cover art, the texture of the paper and the font used, etc. According to her, she took it to a faculty meeting for help, and the other teachers concluded that she had to grade it as a correct answer.

    • @mleszzor6866
      @mleszzor6866 Před 5 měsíci +9

      Both of your stories are amazing!

    • @raygordonteacheschess5501
      @raygordonteacheschess5501 Před 4 měsíci +17

      once I wrote a paper for a friend who said "I didn't know anything about the breakup of the soviet union, so I asked a friend, and HE said: " then she put my entire paper in quotes, ending with "I couldn't have said it better myself." She got an A.

    • @kev4241
      @kev4241 Před 4 měsíci +2

      can't get hung up on small quibbles, quickly scrawl the "F" and move on

    • @josephkavanagh7815
      @josephkavanagh7815 Před 4 měsíci +7

      I took a 3rd year math course called numerical analysis.
      We had to "Prove a theorem" on an exam that involved a set of given variables in relation to the error when solving differential equations numerically.
      The intent of the question was to basically memorize a theorem about the minimum error produced we proved in class and reproduce it on the exam. Except the question said nothing about proving a minimum - it just said prove A theorem.
      I thought I had
      understood the process of the theorem so I didn't have to memorize it, but I just couldn't get it to work out to show a minimum. I ended up proving a maximum to the error which was correct (we did not do this in class), and he had to give me full marks as he didn't specify which theorem to prove. I ended up with 100% on the exam, and he learned to more carefully word his questions!

  • @dangerprobe1
    @dangerprobe1 Před měsícem +3

    Another way of solving this could be making a line X, on centre A, parallel to point B and then rotating the circle A with respect to line X, such that line X will be always parallel to point B… it is basically same as solving with respect to point B as you said but I just noticed that while I was observing you demonstrate the question…

  • @cbwavy
    @cbwavy Před 6 dny

    I definitely have to watch this at least one more time to really grasp how the perspective of the circle's center causes a differet answer than if viewed from a distance outside the circle

  • @SLCCWebmaster
    @SLCCWebmaster Před 5 měsíci +403

    I've been amazed over the years how vaguely, or just poorly worded, tests questions or assignment questions are in K-12 education. It's also a problem in higher education. When I was in school I was sometimes frustrated at how the teacher who wrote a poorly-worded question seemed incredulous that anyone would misunderstand. Sometimes the problem was that the teacher was unable to account for more creative thinking than their own.

    • @graup1309
      @graup1309 Před 5 měsíci +18

      I find it's especially problematic with multiple choice tests. I grew up in a country where they are barely used at all (only for tests that are meant to give an idea of how students as a whole are progressing. They are more meant to test the school and education system as a whole and the grade doesn't account for much) and when I prepared to take the Cambridge Certificate (basically like TOEFL) most of that time was spent learning how to answer multiple choice questions bc well, all important exams we had ever taken up to that point allowed you to explain your answer and what was graded was the whole answer and as long as what you did made sense and was well explained.

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 Před 5 měsíci +12

      Not sure about others, but this was really bad for me, as I had major issues taking the problems (as i am autistic) extremely literally with very little wiggle room. To others, it may have been very easy to "tell what they meant", not for me though.

    • @fragophilefiles9976
      @fragophilefiles9976 Před 5 měsíci

      But this time it's not about wording it's about a wild paradox!

    • @Sandman382
      @Sandman382 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@fragophilefiles9976 And wording. As he stated the wording of the question allowed for 3 different answers two of which and arguably the most relevant answer wasn't an option.

    • @lesliekerman4222
      @lesliekerman4222 Před 5 měsíci +6

      The most ironic thing is that the testwriters can make questions as ambiguously worded as possible but as soon as you missed a unit or misused one word you lose a point

  • @scottthacker9554
    @scottthacker9554 Před 5 měsíci +642

    I have a 1st class degree in Physics and clicked on this thinking it would be simple algebra, I had a huge grin on my face whilst being explained to how I was wrong. I love these kind of videos, I love learning something new. Never stop learning!

    • @theswordofthespiritspeakstoyou
      @theswordofthespiritspeakstoyou Před 5 měsíci +3

      the phenomenon he describes is true, but it does not apply to astronomical observation the way he makes it out to be. According to their own theory, the tilted axis of supposed ball earth always faces into the same direction (towards the star polaris) in this 360 degree orbit which supposedly gives us the seasons. That means the earth is independently rotating ACCORDING TO THEIR OWN THEORY which contradicts this presentation completely because in this presentation earth is dependently revolving around the sun as if there was a mechanical connection between sun and earth, like a carousel, which we know from actual reality that it is not like this.

    • @josephh891
      @josephh891 Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@theswordofthespiritspeakstoyou Apart from getting everything wrong, it does apply to astronomical objects. I'm not sure if you're being serious though. A lot of people, people who never had a chance at education (surprise surprise), repeat stuff from other people who pretend that they believe "earth is flat" to make money of such people. I personally find it hard to believe that anyone who older than 5 can believe "earth flat".

    • @theswordofthespiritspeakstoyou
      @theswordofthespiritspeakstoyou Před 5 měsíci

      the typical response of denial or paid actors: personal attack without arguments. You can't even stick with the topic. There is no point in having a conversation with you. Good luck.@@josephh891 btw I am seeing this channel has a few million followers making money off of spreading lies. None of the people I talk to make these amounts of cash! You might want to reconsider your insults, they don't stand the test of time... but then again so does the heliocentric model not

    • @joelnilsson7129
      @joelnilsson7129 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Yeah, I paused the vidoes calculated and divided the circumference(even did it on a calcluator and made myself realise after getting the answer how unecessary that was) and thougth the answer was obviosu and ez. Then after already calling myself dumb I got even more corrected :) But as U said "Never stop learning"

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před 5 měsíci

      Flat earth websites are largely a creation of the intelligence community. There are legitimate conspiracy inquiries that point the finger at national and international BIG LIES. So one of the ways of getting people to ignore said theories is to "muddy the water" (a CIA term), by confusing the population. Let me give an example. Suppose the JFK assassination was really a plot...a plot by "deep-state" people who wanted JFK dead because his policies were threatening military or financial goals of the deep state. So you create a very slick "Flat earth" website, in which you also show evidence that JFK was murdered by a conspiracy, and you also mention evidence that 9-11 was an inside job, also designed by the deep state. In this way, people who don't like conspiracy theories will conflate "flat earthers" with JFK conspiracy theorists or 9-11 theorists, and just come up with the conclusion, "Hey, those conspiracy theorists are all nuts." thus ignoring two conspiracy theories that have some merit. Believe it or not, there are propagandists who work full time at this sort of thing. That's why it's called the Information Wars.

  • @mikeroll8515
    @mikeroll8515 Před měsícem

    Fantastic analysis...great video!

  • @N65-sim
    @N65-sim Před měsícem +3

    I thought I was wrong when I came up with 4 as answer, but later realized it wasn't in the choices. Reason I came up with 4 is because we're basically calculating the displacement traveled by a rolling circle, and the distance traveled by the center of the small circle is the same as displacement done by any point you pick on its circumference 😆

  • @sarthak-ti
    @sarthak-ti Před 5 měsíci +409

    It’s so impressive how you made this seemingly basic math question into a really interesting and well thought out video. I hadn’t even considered the idea of a Siderial day, it’s so cool!

    • @aleksitjvladica.
      @aleksitjvladica. Před 5 měsíci

      Thou ne maketh a full point, anything of mathematics must be really interesting.

    • @andrewrhsmith
      @andrewrhsmith Před 5 měsíci

      Agreed

    • @bill5197
      @bill5197 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@aniketmeshram6598 reconstruct your sentence. Please.

    • @aniketmeshram6598
      @aniketmeshram6598 Před 5 měsíci

      @@bill5197 i mean to say that he/she/pronouns wants to defy this Cosmic phenomena which was discovered by that great mathematician and astronomer who gave us "Zero"

  • @StefanNoack
    @StefanNoack Před 5 měsíci +380

    You can also arrive at the N+1 solution by considering the case where the radius of circle B is zero. Circle A would not roll at all but still hinge around the point and make one full rotation.

  • @Neishy4AGTE
    @Neishy4AGTE Před měsícem

    I love these sorts of things where you can make it as complicated, or as simple as you like.

  • @DeleteKernel
    @DeleteKernel Před měsícem +1

    Simply while the small circle is moving, keep the camera rotating counter-clockwise for a total of 360 degrees, so it will look like 2 hooked gears with the big one taking one full turn and the small one three. After that, make one 360 degree rotation clockwise of the camera, during which the small circle will make the 4rd rotation.

  • @R_gue
    @R_gue Před 5 měsíci +263

    I really liked the graphic when Jungreis was explaining his proof at 9:49. The additional +1 radius from the smaller circle added to the larger circle is super clever. Awesome video

    • @M4TCH3SM4L0N3
      @M4TCH3SM4L0N3 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Geometry is the best mathematics, and I will never be convinced otherwise.

    • @ADUAquascaping
      @ADUAquascaping Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@M4TCH3SM4L0N3Instead of adding +1, you can allow the vertex to follow sine or cosine and the circumference to follow sine or cosine. Circumference measurement is one rotation for 2 Pi and vertex measurement is two rotations for 2 Pi. You're just changing the path and starting point of the measurement. He used trigonometry, and could have just kept using it for his proof.

    • @M4TCH3SM4L0N3
      @M4TCH3SM4L0N3 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@ADUAquascaping I understand that you CAN use trigonometry for the proof, and I'm not saying that isn't valuable; I'm simply saying that I prefer the branch of mathematics that only requires a straight-edge and compass and its corresponding axioms and proofs.

    • @ahall9839
      @ahall9839 Před 5 měsíci

      @@RepentandbelieveinJesusChrist5 Sad how religion turns you into a mindless drone

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Před 5 měsíci +128

    I can't believe how well the explanation is made.

  • @indigoriviera
    @indigoriviera Před měsícem +3

    Fantastic explanation! You are one of the clearest and most creative instructors on CZcams. Thank you for your content.

  • @kibnob
    @kibnob Před měsícem

    I got the answer using the center-distance proof right off the bat!! Thanks for the self esteem boost, really needed that today

  • @foxboy6662
    @foxboy6662 Před 3 měsíci +733

    As an aerospace engineer, once I realized this is sort of a trick question, I visualized it as I do with sidereal and solar days. I'm happy you talked about those in the video.

    • @basildraws
      @basildraws Před 3 měsíci +11

      Same thought. How is it possible that not one of the test writers/editors etc. had even the most rudimentary understanding of astronomy? I solved it from the thumbnail, before watching the video and wondered how I could be wrong, since my answer wasn't listed.

    • @jeffmartin-g8r
      @jeffmartin-g8r Před 3 měsíci +1

      I wish Derek had rolled his coins in the other direction to match solar system's rotation. My head is stuck on the astronomical visual (and I have a hard time dropping that out of my head).

    • @dvelarde
      @dvelarde Před 2 měsíci +4

      ABSOLUTELY NOT A TRICK QUESTION. Saw the answer just by looking at the problem, only to watch the video and see that I was correct. The problem with average minds is that when they become highly educated, the tend to Believe that they are way more intelligent than they really are, when in all actually they are just smarter than than rest of us.......... in one specific area.

    • @hamasmillitant1
      @hamasmillitant1 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@basildraws it was a trick question they told u it made 1 revolution then they asked u howmany revolutions it made if ppl misread question and answered how many rotations it made well thats like being asked if 2 trains are traveling at x speed and start from station x & y at time x when will they meet and deciding to submit a answer on wind speeds over tracks instead

    • @basildraws
      @basildraws Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@hamasmillitant1 No, it wasn't a trick question. If it had been, then "1" would have been on the list of choices. So even if they HAD intended it that way, they still made a mistake. It's pretty clear they meant for the student to calculate rotations based on the choices given, and it's clear they still failed to calculate the answer correctly themselves. The use of the word 'revolution' instead of 'rotation' is just an ADDED mistake on their part.

  • @berryl9653
    @berryl9653 Před 5 měsíci +255

    Undergraduate astronomy student here. The idea of solar vs sidereal time was something I had heard about before, but never properly understood until now. Thank you for all that you do!

    • @temple69
      @temple69 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I still don’t understand exactly how the movement of the earth affects the rotation time.

    • @patrickchang9135
      @patrickchang9135 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@temple69 Watch a 3D demonstration of it

    • @igarazha
      @igarazha Před 5 měsíci

      But why should we add 1 day for Sidereal year, if Earth may not "slipping"? But it was correct only for slipping case

    • @duzyolek
      @duzyolek Před 5 měsíci +5

      ​@@igarazhaQuite the opposite. It works only if there is no slipping. Which is exactly the case with the Earth's movement around the Sun.

    • @AwesomeHairo
      @AwesomeHairo Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks for not misusing any comma.

  • @annimon2814
    @annimon2814 Před 16 dny

    By far the coolest CZcams video I’ve see in a while

  • @keaaw
    @keaaw Před měsícem

    I got it right :). I thought I was wrong at first because my answer wasn't listed in the test's list of answers. My hypothesis through observation and thinking about the equal diameter case and the case where the stationary circle has zero radius (is just the point at the origin) was that for 1 revolution of the moving circle, its center will move 1 perimeter (the moving circle's) distance. With that hypothesis (I did not rigorously prove it), with the moving circle having radius a and the stationary circle having radius b, I set (a+b)*2*pi*r = X*a*2*pi*r, and get the answer X = (a+b)/a. The left hand side of the initial equation is the distance the center of the moving circle travels, and X is "how many moving circle's perimeters".

  • @sudokode
    @sudokode Před 5 měsíci +240

    I love how Derek goes the extra mile and tracks down one of the people that called the problem out, who just so happens to be a mathematician now 😂

    • @jasonkilley
      @jasonkilley Před 5 měsíci +22

      Right?! As soon as I saw his title, I was like, ok that checks out lol

    • @erikaz1590
      @erikaz1590 Před 5 měsíci +13

      At this point, I just assume Derek has a 'Sherlock Holmes'-esque filing cabinet of every mathematician, professor, and scientist he can call on for collabs XD

    • @abrarhameem8424
      @abrarhameem8424 Před 5 měsíci +3

      matched so perfectly, like a well written script from a movie😂

    • @thegrizzly7402
      @thegrizzly7402 Před 5 měsíci +3

      is it really a coincidence that the person who called out the test creators on a math problem is a mathematicion

    • @MrPruske
      @MrPruske Před 5 měsíci +2

      Always has been

  • @CF542
    @CF542 Před 5 měsíci +178

    The fact that the main issue was a poorly worded question is the exact issue I've had in school with so many tests being poorly written. So often the test writer(s) understand the questions they wrote but they don't have them vetted properly so they can be understood by the test takers.

    • @jaakkopontinen
      @jaakkopontinen Před 5 měsíci +5

      This so very, very much. The countless pains of trying to figure out whether to answer what's literally being asked instead of answering what would seem to be what the maker of the question wanted to ask.
      It's ridiculous how such a thing exists so pluralously in tests, questionnaires, forms and medical examination papers etc.

    • @silentdrew7636
      @silentdrew7636 Před 5 měsíci +4

      I don't think the question writer knows what a revolution is.

    • @tristanpage9548
      @tristanpage9548 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Well I guess if anything it better prepares you for life

    • @reefhog
      @reefhog Před 5 měsíci +1

      That’s not a fact. The main issue, is that the correct answer wasn’t even there. The wording of the question was poor also.

    • @bkucenski
      @bkucenski Před 5 měsíci

      Math word problems are more often English problems which is why they are often criticized as being racist. You shouldn't need to be an English major to sold word problems. They should be written like people naturally speak. And the answer should reflect that as well.

  • @adolforabasa
    @adolforabasa Před 8 dny

    Another way to see it is using curvature. The (exterior) integral curvature of along any closed curve in the plane is 2pi (thus adding one). Interior on the other hand is -2pi due to the change of sign in the curvature vector (thus removing one).
    This is one of the interpretations of curvature: it tells you how longer (or shorter) a curve gets by looking at the points sitting at distance one from it, provided the set of such points is well defined (always defined for the distance of any convex set for instance).

  • @b1tfl1p
    @b1tfl1p Před měsícem +7

    I was trying to picture the circle rolling on the other in my head and was feeling insane because at every point the only version of events that made sense was 4 rotations. I feel proud of myself for that. That'll be the smartest thing I do all year

    • @taotzu1339
      @taotzu1339 Před měsícem

      I approached it as a math equation with the circumference of a circle as 2πr and immediately said 3, but stuck around for the rest of the video. I wonder if this phenomenon confused the heck out of early watch makers?

  • @pradeepkrishnamurthy2557
    @pradeepkrishnamurthy2557 Před 4 měsíci +349

    That actually blew my mind. It was so great to see how a simple math question with two circles can be related to space observation. Thank you for such a great content!!

    • @DavidEdwards9801
      @DavidEdwards9801 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Wait till they figure out how it ties in to space travel too =)

  • @RocinanteGold
    @RocinanteGold Před 4 měsíci +227

    Ironically, the problem identified by the three students, was essentially the same problem that ETS faced when it had to account for converting scores based on 79 questions, to the 80 question scale. "Where did the extra question go?" is a lot like "where did the extra day go?"

    • @kwimms
      @kwimms Před 4 měsíci

      This is a dumb fake question to convince you that the Earth is turning. These two clowns couldn't solve the time of day.

    • @toriless
      @toriless Před 4 měsíci +12

      They rotated the scores around themselves

    • @suivzmoi
      @suivzmoi Před 4 měsíci +17

      they converted the score from solar to sidereal but all the good schools were only accepting solar scores. hang it up, son.

    • @jakemccoy
      @jakemccoy Před 4 měsíci +12

      Pretending the question was never there is improper and creates more inaccuracy in the scores. The question was part of the test and consumed time that could have been used on other problems. At least some students failed to answer some other questions correctly because they wasted time on this question. So, any student who answered 3 should have been given full credit. The test makers who allowed this faulty question also administered a faulty correction.

    • @John-qd5of
      @John-qd5of Před 4 měsíci +1

      😂 That is so funny. Where did the extra question go? Oh, no! Where did my application to Yale go?

  • @thestranger1949
    @thestranger1949 Před 19 dny +1

    Finally now i can relax. Huh this was satisfiying 😌.
    Thanks🎉🎉

  • @AndrewMoizer
    @AndrewMoizer Před měsícem +1

    I figured 4 right away: 3 turns for the gear ratio, and one more because the small gear is going around the circumference. Then spent half an hour trying to figure out why I was 'wrong'. Even dug out old Meccano gears to confirm I was not mistaken (which let me confirm 2 for a 1:1 ratio, 3 for a 2:1 ratio, and 4 for 3:1. And then I watched the rest of the video and learned a few other things that made it all worth while. Thanks.

  • @PramodApte23
    @PramodApte23 Před 5 měsíci +391

    The best thing about Veritasium videos are that they keep giving. The video could have been ended at multiple occasions, but they make an amazing, extensive learning out of it.

    • @Leyrann
      @Leyrann Před 5 měsíci +9

      I'm really glad Veritasium included the astronomical part. The moment I realized my mistake (which happened when I gave it some more thought after he confirmed that 3 was wrong), I noticed the connection to sidereal days - as a kid, I spent ages wondering why my astronomy books claimed a day was only 23 h 56 minutes long, so that's pretty firmly imprinted on my mind.

    • @nameredacted1242
      @nameredacted1242 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Leave it to Veritasium to make a 45-minute fascinating video on a seemingly trivial topic!

    • @louiejohncastillo9822
      @louiejohncastillo9822 Před 5 měsíci

      I think the explanation here is confusing, its actually pretty simple if we use SUPERPOSITION:
      take the number of rotation ("revolution" along the circumference flatted out as a line)
      we call it "linear".
      and the number of the revolution of center point of circle A along the circumference from start to end (the given is 1).
      to be less confusing, lets just say the single revolution of the circle A, along B.
      we call it "given".
      linear = 3
      given = 1
      total = 4
      this is true for all radii.
      ex. 2: for 2 coins of the same radius for about 1 revolution.
      linear = 1
      given = 1
      total = 2

    • @theboxingbiker
      @theboxingbiker Před 5 měsíci

      If you learn real math go to mathologer. Veritasium is rookie compared to him

  • @LOCOBJORN
    @LOCOBJORN Před 5 měsíci +383

    What’s crazy to me is when I tried to solve it, I intuitively did one rotation of the little one on the big one in my imagination and saw it only go a 1/4 of the way. I then thought to myself, “wait that must be wrong”. Mind blown

    • @Genesis-revelation70
      @Genesis-revelation70 Před 5 měsíci +44

      I did the same thing and guessed 9/2 since it was the closest answer haha

    • @Mandragara
      @Mandragara Před 5 měsíci +13

      I snipped the small circle into a string and draped it over the larger circle in my mind, giving me the answer of 3

    • @oneilljames1
      @oneilljames1 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Yea but it's just a visual representation of the problem, you're supposed to use the data given in the problem. The actual size of the "coins" in the image is meaningless

    • @Mandragara
      @Mandragara Před 5 měsíci +17

      @@oneilljames1 The image is to scale

    • @ADUAquascaping
      @ADUAquascaping Před 5 měsíci +8

      Use cosine and sine. Set the edge as cosine (0,1) and the center as sine (0,0). 2 Pi is one cosine rotation. 2 Pi is two sine rotations. Cosine as the circumference has four 90-degree rotations and sine as the vertex has eight 90-degree rotations within 2 Pi.

  • @wonwoo0426
    @wonwoo0426 Před měsícem

    This is such a delightful error! Gave me a good chuckle!

  • @Nobody_Fn_Important
    @Nobody_Fn_Important Před měsícem

    I knew it was too simple. this was such a good video thanks for broadening my mind.

  • @user-kb6mj7zq8t
    @user-kb6mj7zq8t Před 2 měsíci +432

    What is so interesting about your videos is that almost 100% of the I couldn't care less about the topic. Yet, I'm still enthralled through the whole thing. That is most definitely a compliment just to be clear. I love that you love to teach. That's all that matters.

    • @curiaregis9479
      @curiaregis9479 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Veritasium is ridiculously talented at making videos.

    • @tombiby5892
      @tombiby5892 Před měsícem

      How many sidereal minutes does CZcams take?

    • @literallyjustgrass
      @literallyjustgrass Před měsícem

      @@tombiby5892I have no idea but for a production like this it's not uncommon to have multiple hours of side reel just in case

  • @ebubegideon1060
    @ebubegideon1060 Před měsícem

    I love you and what you do Sir.
    Keep them coming. 🥳
    You always blow my mind

  • @peter9477
    @peter9477 Před 3 měsíci +517

    My brain didn't fully accept this until I pictured a circle going "around" a straight line segment in the same manner. Picture a horizontal line segment, circle positioned above it at the left end, bottom (not right or left side) of circle touching the end of the line segment. The circle travels to the right along the length of the line. Then to flip itself around the right tip of the line to the bottom side it has to undergo a 180 degree turn, but while doing so it travels no additional distance along the line. (Its centre travels a distance along a semicircle, but the part touching the tip of the line does not.) Then back along the bottom of the line to the left, then another 180 degree rotation back around the left tip, to the top again. Total distance traveled is just twice the length of the line. Number of rotations is some amount to accomplish that traveling, PLUS one additional complete rotation. Same thing for any convex shape that it travels completely around.

    • @peter9477
      @peter9477 Před 3 měsíci +16

      I hadn't watched this far when I wrote that, but he almost describes this at @11:15, though for some reason he stops after only one side of the line.

    • @x0rn312
      @x0rn312 Před 2 měsíci +6

      This is a good explanation.

    • @marissabulso6439
      @marissabulso6439 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Thank you, that really helped put the broken pieces of my brain back together. 😂 Much appreciated. ❤

    • @k.r.koushik9660
      @k.r.koushik9660 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Thank you so much. Was going mad

    • @codyhall6802
      @codyhall6802 Před 2 měsíci

      Great explanation thanks

  • @Ran_ji
    @Ran_ji Před měsícem +2

    To count the revolution of smaller coin we should put a mark on circumference of it. At touching point of 2 coins. It gives us simplest way of understanding the revolution.

  • @jessicapeyton5444
    @jessicapeyton5444 Před měsícem

    If the big circle had paint on its perimeter and the rotating circle was getting painted as its edge touched the painted portion, there would be a blank space (with no paint) when the smaller circle is right side up (4:30). To paint the whole circumference of the small circle, you would need to go a little further which would reach 1/3 of the big circle. So even though the small circle has "rotated" 4 times, it has not matched up with the circumference of the big circle.

  • @Schweebcraft
    @Schweebcraft Před 5 měsíci +172

    As a machinist, we deal with this quite a lot. When milling around a circular boss, you have to do a calculation how much you need to increase the feedrate to keep the same speed at the outside of the end mill. The same goes for milling inside a hole, except you calculate the smaller diameter caused by the size of the tool instead, since everything is based on the center of a circular tool.

    • @mitchelljao
      @mitchelljao Před 5 měsíci +3

      Super interesting!

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Dude how fast are your feeds for this to matter?

    • @fresheFresse
      @fresheFresse Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@appa609 On a production machine this matters. For one offs who cares.

    • @devjk1
      @devjk1 Před 5 měsíci +1

      As a CNC programmer, that's not really true. I just asked a couple other programmers/machinists at my shop this question and nobody got it right. The thing you have to deal with is varying chip load, which isn't the same at all.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@fresheFresse Yeah doesn't matter at all for one offs and low volume stuff. When you need a machine running 24/7 for years to make 12 million of something, a fraction of a second quicker could save days

  • @davidfehrle8561
    @davidfehrle8561 Před 5 měsíci +286

    I had an error on my SAT too (in 2016). Half of the exams had a misprint that switched the time allowed for each section with another section. They ended up throwing away both entire sections of the exam, I was pretty mad since it was parts in my strongest subject getting tossed. Timing is a big part of the SAT and I feel bad for folks who may have spent longer on this problem since the real answer wasn’t listed which may have cost them more than just the one free point in the end.

    • @samgray4
      @samgray4 Před 5 měsíci +25

      This is why skipping questions you can’t immediately solve is such an important standardized test strategy

    • @PANDEAD2
      @PANDEAD2 Před 5 měsíci +8

      If someone was dumb enough to continue wasting time on one question that was stumping them instead of moving on and finishing everything else and returning, I doubt it made much of a difference to their end score.

    • @Boltclick
      @Boltclick Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@PANDEAD2 That's not necessarily true. Some questions require more time, so a person might just assume this is a harder question. Thus, instead of spending their normal 1 min, they'll spend 3 minutes. Generally, the skipping questions when you're stumped is good if you don't know where to start or if you think the problem will take too long, but otherwise, spending an extra couple of minutes is usually worth it, as otherwise you'll just lose your train of thought if you skip the question. Since the question had a misprint, it's entirely possible that some people had the right idea, and were sure they knew how to solve the question, so they spent that extra bit of time to hopefully solve the question, instead of completely discarding their train of thought for that problem and moving on (since moving on effectively resets their progress on that question to 0).

    • @Techburn997
      @Techburn997 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Boltclick Skipping then returning tends to be the better option as there may be later questions with similar reasoning that will simplify the harder question. It also allows you to divvy up your remaining time more equitably between any other questions skipped.

    • @gabbleratchet1890
      @gabbleratchet1890 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It’s also a good strategy because you are penalized for wrong answers but not for blank answers.

  • @SchawjibbWanders
    @SchawjibbWanders Před měsícem +1

    I am 40 now. My father told me about sidereal year concept when I was 9 or 10. I just didn't believe him then; I thought he might have made that up to add another day in a year! This video made me nostalgic and, as by product, helped me understand the concept.

  • @garvitahuja3717
    @garvitahuja3717 Před 5 dny +1

    It can be done using concept of rolling in physics
    Let velocity of centre of smaller circle be v, radius of bigger circle be r, angular velocity of smaller circle be w, no. of revolutions of smaller circle be n
    Now, the centre of smakler circle is revolving in a circle of radius r+r/3=4r/3 about the centre of larger circle
    So, time for 1 revolution will be 2π×(4r/3) / v = 8πr/3v =t (let)
    Since smaller circle is in pure rolling motion, velocity of point of contact with larger circle is 0
    So, v=w×r/3 , so w=3v/r
    So, 2π×n/w = t
    So, n=wt/2π = 4

  • @lancedrath
    @lancedrath Před 5 měsíci +246

    It’s cool how this problem has so many practical implications that most people wouldn’t even think about.

    • @sinephase
      @sinephase Před 5 měsíci +7

      what amazed me is it's as simple as putting the smaller circle on the inside of the larger one and seeing it makes less rotations

    • @user-bm4ow6fh2x
      @user-bm4ow6fh2x Před 5 měsíci +4

      Yes; the entire industrial revolution relied on a precise understanding of gears.

  • @daleferrier3050
    @daleferrier3050 Před 5 měsíci +248

    I’m glad you chose 3 at first. I didn’t feel so stupid because of it. 😂
    The triangle shape was what helped it click with me. When the circle is going around one of the corners, the point it touches the triangle doesn’t move, but the circle rotates by a third before carrying on. Third multiplied by 3 corners equals 1 extra rotation.

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Před 5 měsíci

      Did you even watch the video? Did you miss, that it is always just +1? So 365,24 days of rotation about the sun becomes 366,24 from a different view point? +1 exactly even there.

    • @MeMe-gm9di
      @MeMe-gm9di Před 5 měsíci +5

      Yeah, that makes it a lot more intuitive for me as well. Especially since you can easily in your head generalise it to rectangles, pentagons, hexagons, …
      So the circle intuitively follows.

    • @the1doubledeuce
      @the1doubledeuce Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@gardenjoy5223 I mean, he saw the whole triangle part, didn't he? The concept is not the easiest to fully grasp, and I also agree that the triangle part helped to make it make sense to me, a simpleton.

    • @chronoreverse
      @chronoreverse Před 5 měsíci

      I thought 3 immediately, backtracked because it had to be a tricky question if it were on Veritasium, recalculated 4, didn't see it on the list and decided to just watch the rest of the video.

    • @Cotronixco
      @Cotronixco Před 5 měsíci +1

      No, not 1/3 at each corner. Less than that.

  • @HughEMC
    @HughEMC Před 9 dny

    Amazing paradox😮 I mean the fact you can turn a straight line into a circle & observing the circles rotation from different perspectives changes the amount of rotations the outer circle makes in both cases. The reality of physics is awesome

  • @hydropage2855
    @hydropage2855 Před měsícem +2

    To me it was actually intuitive that it should be 4. Think about it, the circumference of the smaller circle travels as much as ITS CENTER around the larger one. The distance the center of the smaller circle travels is really a circumference of radius (1 + 1/3) times the larger one: 4/3 the radius of the larger circle. Divide this 4/3 by 1/3 to get how many times the smaller circle’s circumference wraps around THIS “true travel circumference”, and this is 4.
    (Edit: I watched the rest of the video, turns out my intuition was exactly what was explained in the video haha)

  • @WobiKabobi
    @WobiKabobi Před 5 měsíci +152

    “Mess up this test as a teenager and your entire adult life is screwed” is such a top notch system.

    • @konstantinossarlis2214
      @konstantinossarlis2214 Před 5 měsíci +13

      As a EU ex-student in some backwater country, we always loved to quarrel and argue about our SAT equivalent/university entry exams. Meanwhile in a supposedly model country, poor students are basically sitting trivial pursuit style pop quizzes that determine their academic future. It's basically the concept of just testing your ability to take tests, cranked to 11. Just because a system is horizontal/standardized, should not excuse it for being extremely poor at measuring anything with actual substance or biased. Thankfully more and more universities are moving away from such evaluation models...

    • @415s30
      @415s30 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I enjoyed not being able to major in things due to crazy math that you wouldn't even use in that field, and if you did you could figure it out because it isn't a test.

    • @phelan8385
      @phelan8385 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I didn't have to take the SAT so I didn't, still got into a really good California state university

    • @MrTVx99
      @MrTVx99 Před 5 měsíci

      It’s funny how people are scared that AI will take over their jobs and they will. Because the education system is training people to be like robots. How useful it would have been to have deep discussions about a controversial topic with the rest of the class or you discuss morals in details. You’d learn to speak, listen, think on the spot, look at different perspectives. But no, the system just overly emphasises teaching outdated subjects to an irrelevant degree and determines your life by a test you cram for and forget everything you learnt in the past 10 years after you finish.
      The system is designed to keep you a failure. Also my high school and university tests and exams were all cheated on. The high school exams were leaked and sold on social media. I know that because I saw the diagram on social media in the question (obviously they hid all the numbers), and I thought it was just a scam and no way the exam board is this incompetent. Turns out they were, I was in the exam and I saw that question and my blood was boiling. Obviously most cheaters didn’t get caught.
      Then in University we had lockdowns. No in person exams so you had 24 hour open book exams that they made impossible in difficulty. Wouldn’t be a problem if they also made grades to reflect that, except for the fact that people were literally working together because it’s open book. You had entire groups of people working on the paper together and obviously no way to catch them either.
      The only thing the education system taught me is cheaters always win.

    • @fatcatpatdat
      @fatcatpatdat Před 5 měsíci +3

      When they said to "hang it up" if you mess up, I almost thought they were telling you to go hang yourself if you fail

  • @HuntingSunder
    @HuntingSunder Před 5 měsíci +287

    I can say from experience, pointing out flaws in a test is such a double edged sword. I pointed out 3 bad questions on a science test in 7th grade, and the entire class hated me because "I" messed up their scores.

    • @BlueProphet7
      @BlueProphet7 Před 5 měsíci +97

      A good teacher will give everyone credit for a bad question, right or wrong. Or AT LEAST nullify it, which could hurt a score if you were 'right' I suppose.

    • @SenneMeuleman
      @SenneMeuleman Před 5 měsíci +7

      bro why do you even do that in 7th grade... of course people are gonna hate you when you pull such nerd behaviour... What makes it worse is that even though the questions were bad you could probably answer them 'correctly'

    • @HHalcyon
      @HHalcyon Před 5 měsíci +74

      @@SenneMeuleman What "nerd behaviour" are you talking about? You can't have errors like that when it comes to numbers. It is correct to point out such errors because it could be a life or death sentence in a world of numbers. These things must be correct. The teacher messed up there and it's nothing to do with "nerd behaviour". At least that mistake was in a classroom.

    • @RicardoLeonardoRamirezReyes
      @RicardoLeonardoRamirezReyes Před 5 měsíci +17

      @@BlueProphet7 Yes, otherwise, it is unfair. The goal of a test is to measure learning, but some students think the test is the goal by itself. (I am a teacher)

    • @SenneMeuleman
      @SenneMeuleman Před 5 měsíci

      @@HHalcyon mannn, in 2 years i'm done studying and can become a math teacher, do you think i will always make correct questions? Naaaaah impossible, but if its just a stupid test and the desired answer is pretty clear, even though wrong... then what is the problem? And if it really is a problem i would just give everyone a point for that question so no one can complain

  • @nightowlowo149
    @nightowlowo149 Před měsícem

    this is one of my favorite videos on yt, ever

  • @TheMohawkManTV
    @TheMohawkManTV Před 25 dny

    Woah that is a weird one, the center of circle A is moving along the radius of B plus the radius of A, which is the translation. On the Flat path the translation is only as far as it rolls in that direction. That's wild. Great video!! I liked the proof he gave with the slipping, really breaks it down!

  • @reidakted4416
    @reidakted4416 Před 5 měsíci +756

    One of my SAT questions (on the verbal test) still bothers me. It was the analogy questions "A is to B as X is to . . . " and they were asking for the meaning of "sanction" and both "to approve" and "to punish" were options. I wonder who sanctioned that and if they were sanctioned. 😆

  • @AndrewPang-if3wu
    @AndrewPang-if3wu Před 2 měsíci +178

    7:44 whoever came up with that headline deserved a raise.

  • @sonnybowman
    @sonnybowman Před měsícem

    For more clarity a line describing the circumference with a radius derived by subtracting point B from point A. If one were to move point A to the intersection of circle A and circle B the correct answer I suspect would be 3.

  • @eriquedobson7523
    @eriquedobson7523 Před měsícem +1

    2:32 This statement makes me feel better, because I TOO answered B, but I honestly couldn't tell you what the question was actually asking me to do. Atleast not at the pace the question would demand on the SAT/ACT

  • @jasonpatterson8091
    @jasonpatterson8091 Před 5 měsíci +412

    Watched this with a friend and they really struggled with the extra rotation per revolution until I showed them a coin rolling along the edge of a rectangle. It's getting around the corners that causes the additional rotation - angular movement is required without any linear movement. The circle is just the limit with an infinite number of infinitely small corners. On the inside of the circle (or any concave corner) that corner rotation is in the opposite direction, so in one loop of any size and shape it will result in -1 rotation.

    • @MiauMichigan
      @MiauMichigan Před 5 měsíci +24

      Thank you!!! I finally understand 😊

    • @Warfred
      @Warfred Před 5 měsíci +12

      Actually get it now!

    • @mk1cortinatony395
      @mk1cortinatony395 Před 5 měsíci +10

      that made it easier for me thanks. Pity the guy doing the vid couldnt explain as easily.

    • @stephenwatkins7592
      @stephenwatkins7592 Před 5 měsíci +24

      @@mk1cortinatony395 He showed how the rounded path around the corners of the triangle could be pasted together to get a complete circle.

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Před 5 měsíci +5

      What dontou mean on inside lf circle the rotation is in the opposite dorection..the circle.rptsripnal.direction doesn't change so notnsure what you meant..and how does a circle have infinite number of corners..you mean because it has an infinite number pf tangent lines?