Media Summary: Triangles have multiple centres, and many of them lie on the so-called Euler Extra footage from the main video at - Featuring Neil Sloane, founder of the OEIS This video ... Featuring Dr James Grime. More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Patreon:
Number Line Numberphile - Detailed Analysis & Overview
Triangles have multiple centres, and many of them lie on the so-called Euler Extra footage from the main video at - Featuring Neil Sloane, founder of the OEIS This video ... Featuring Dr James Grime. More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Patreon: Neil Sloane discusses The Inventory Sequence... See also Jane Street's special page: ... Trisecting angles and calculating cube roots was a big problem for Euclid and his cohorts. Discussed by Zsuzsanna Dancso at ... Featuring Marcus du Sautoy. Book details below. The game is also widely known as Chutes & Ladders. More links & stuff in full ...
Featuring Tony Feng from UC Berkeley. See our other new video today about -1/12 with Tony Padilla at ... Fermat's "Little" Theorem is great - but beware of Fermat Liars and tricky Carmichael Maybe pause the video and see if you can figure these out? Featuring Neil Sloane of OEIS fame... More links & stuff in full ... James Maynard discusses his proof that infinite primes exist missing each base 10 digit - he uses 7 as his arbitrary example. Featuring Neil Sloane from the OEIS. Check out Brilliant (get 20% off their premium service): Featuring Asaf Karagila. More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Asaf is a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow. Asaf's blog ...
Grant Sanderson discusses a race between two types of prime Tony Padilla calculates Pi with Skittles - then uses UK population data to do the same thing. Results may vary! More links & stuff in ...