Piazza Class page.
Week 6: 19 February 2017.
- Opening Remarks:
I am still reading and marking your Book Reviews.
This week I travel to Mexico, where that exercise will continue.
In your readings of Stillwell, I'd like it if you could include reading the exercises, as well as the text.
I have come to realize that Stillwell puts some useful historical and mathematical gems in his exercises, and
that we all have something to learn from thinking about them.
Several good texts/reference works employ this trick of including additional material in the exercises.
The historical notes at the end of the chapter provide some interesting color about the lives of the protagaonists; they are likewise worth reading.
This week's readings and exercises are all about solving equations, which has been one of the main uses of mathematics since antiquity.
Of particular note was the early Renaissance explosion in what is now Northern Italy that led to solutions to the cubic and quartic equations
in the space of just few years–this was the first advance in this topic in nearly a millenium, as well as the last for about 250 years.
It also led to the modern understanding of and comfort with the exotic negative and complex numbers.
It is in part because of these (and many other) advances in our ability to give/find/approximate/compute solutions to systems of equations, and the
appearence of this in the mathematics cirriculum that a common view of a mathematician is "someone who solves equations all day".
Of course, this is not the main task of mathematicians, neither academic nor those working in the private sector nor those teaching.
For me, however, solving equations is a significant part of my research.
I sometimes start a professional talk with the comment that I am the only person in the room who does what their mother thinks they do.
Silliness aside, solving equations is important and serious business; we have seen a lot of this so far in our study of the history of mathematics;
many surviving pieces of mathematics are aids to calculation, or devoted to methods to solve equations and obtain numerical answers.
- Reading:
- Stillwell Chapter 6.
As mentioned above, please read the exercises, as well as the historical notes at the end of the chapter.
- Read the St. Andrew's page on
Quadratic, cubic and quartic equations.
- Read the St. Andrew's page on
Tartaglia vs. Cardano. This is some of their
correspondence. An interesting read. You may also skim stories of some of the other protagonists.
- I have a short text that is a transcription of a math circle that I
have given (including Tuesday March 6 at the
East Texas Math Teacher's Circle, in S.F. Austin State University in
Nacagdoches, TX) on solving the cubic.
If you have any comments on this text, I would be happy to hear them, as I am interested in improving it.
- Read Bell's Chapter on Descartes (in advance of next week)
- Assignment: Due Monday, February 26. (HW 7)
To hand in: Email a .pdf to Mehrzad Monzavi
Mehrzad@math.tamu.edu.
- Exercises 6.5.2 and 6.5.3. For 6.5.3, find the other two solutions (this will require reading my notes on cubics.)
-
Here is another cubic to solve completely: x3=7x+6, and another: x3+2x+4i=0,
where i is the imaginary unit, a square root of -1. You will find the example on the bottom of page 3 of my notes, as well as
the formula (-i)3=i, useful for the second cubic.
- Do the exercises 6.7.1, 6.7.2, and 6.7.3 in Stillwell. These should be relatively short.
- Cardano led an interesting life. Look up some material on the web (two sources besides our book) and write something about his life, both
mathematical and otherwise. Probably two paragraphs, and try to include some story that is not in Stillwell's potted biography.
Last modified: Mon Feb 19 18:57:19 CST 2018