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How To Be A Math Genius - Your Brilliant Brain and How To Train It

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97% found this document useful (29 votes)
32K views128 pages

How To Be A Math Genius - Your Brilliant Brain and How To Train It

Uploaded by

Frejus KVEGLO
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

REVISED EDITION

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HOW TO BE A

MATH
GENIUS

Written by Dr. Mike Goldsmith


Consultant Branka Surla
Illustrated by Seb Burnett
CONTENTS
6 A world of math

MATH BRAIN INVENTING NUMBERS MAGIC NUMBERS


10 Meet your brain 26 Learning to count 50 Seeing sequences

12 Math skills 28 Number systems 52 Pascal’s triangle

14 Learning math 30 Big zero 54 Magic squares

16 Brain vs. machine 32 Pythagoras 56 Missing numbers

18 Problems with numbers 34 Thinking outside the box 58 Karl Gauss

20 Early mathematicians 36 Number patterns 60 Infinity

22 Seeing the solution 38 Calculation tips 62 Numbers with meaning


40 Archimedes 64 Number tricks
42 Math that measures 66 Puzzling primes
44 How big? How far?

46 The size of the problem

4
SHAPES AND SPACE A WORLD OF MATH
70 Triangles 94 Interesting times 120 Glossary
72 Shaping up 96 Mapping 122 Answers
74 Shape shifting 98 Grace Hopper 126 Index
76 Round and round 100 Probability 128 Acknowledgments
78 The third dimension 102 Displaying data

80 3-D shape puzzles 104 Logic puzzles and paradoxes

82 3-D fun 106 Breaking codes

84 Leonhard Euler 108 Codes and ciphers

86 Amazing mazes 110 Alan Turing

88 Optical illusions 112 Algebra

90 Impossible shapes 114 Brainteasers

116 Secrets of the Universe The book is full of


118 Katherine Johnson
problems and puzzles for
you to solve. To check
the answers, turn to
pages 122–125.

5
There’s a height restriction
I´ll be in this line for on this ride, sonny. Try
10 minutes, so I should still coming back next year.
be in time to catch the next
I wonder what would bus home.
happen if the ride spun
even faster?

People are hungry


tonight. At this rate, I’ll
run out of hot dogs in
half an hour.

r m
l fo the e es
a s k i ,
ncesenti help d ma heor l use
s it n t a ,
ie is e ts— es a me ctic nes
Sc ath ntis eori ct. So o pra achi !
M cie th xa t t s
s st e pu es, m ride
te em n dg al
th the bri rniv
e a
ar uild n c
o b ve
t de
an C
j Yo a
a ust u n lc
co ca ab ee u
s k o d l
al ts, a e to ut ma at
l b n a ev th

A WORLD OF
ca e w d t car ery to io
lc or im . Q th m n
ul k in u in ak
at ed gs an g, e
io
n ou mu titi from
an t u s es

MATH
d si t ,
es ng
tim
at
io
n.

It is impossible to imagine our world without


math. We use it, often without realizing, for a Panel puzzle
These shapes form a square panel, used
whole range of activities—when we tell time, A in one of the carnival stalls. However, an
go shopping, catch a ball, or play a game. This extra shape has somehow been mixed
up with them. Can you figure out which
book is all about how to get your math brain piece does not belong?
buzzing, with lots of things to do, many of the B
big ideas explained, and stories about how the
E
great math brains have changed our world. C
F

D
6
Gulp! The slide looks
even steeper from the top.
I wonder what speed I’ll
be going when I get to
the bottom?
Look at me! I’m
floating in the air and
I’ve got two tongues!

One in four people are I think I’ve got the


hitting a coconut. Grr! I’m angle just right... one
making a loss. more go and I’ll win
a prize.

P
M a
inv any tte
su ol ar r
rep ch a ve lo eas ns
e s o o
Of at o how king f ma
ten r h n fo th
us the ow um r pa nd
ed s s h b e tt sa
ne to h e pa ape rs erns ap
e d
w e tt
wa lp u rn behe s ,
g sh ake roun ut
ys s a s ca ave e s i n
d us rld m a b o
of p n a te
a w
thi nd in n be . a st p w s o o ea
nk
ing spire
Sh nder e hel f the to kn to cr
c
U pa e o e d th —
. s ns ne ma ing s.
se . You a of nyth me
a
us are gn a ky g
i s s i c
th de ri
d gt
an ludin
inc

Profit margin A game of chance


It costs $144 a day to run the Everyone loves to try to knock down
bumper cars, accounting for a coconut—but what are your chances
wages, electricity, transportation, of success? The stall owner needs to
and so on. There are 12 bumper know so he can make sure he’s got
cars, and, on average, 60 percent enough coconuts, and to work out how
of them are occupied each session. much to charge. He’s discovered that, on
The ride is open for eight hours a average, he has 90 customers a day, each
day, with four sessions an hour, throwing three balls, and the total number
and each driver pays $2 per of coconuts won is 30. So what is the
session. How much profit is likelihood of you winning a coconut?
the owner making?
7
Math
brain
Meninges Cerebrum Where thinking Looking inside
Protective layers occurs and memories
that cushion the are stored This cross-section of the skull
brain against shock
Corpus callosum Links the reveals the thinking part of the
two sides of the brain brain, or cerebrum. Beneath its
Skull Forms a
tough casing
Hypothalamus Controls outer layers is the “white matter,”
around the brain
sleep, hunger, and body which transfers signals between
temperature
different parts of the brain.
Cerebellum Helps Pituitary gland Controls
control balance the release of hormones
and movement
A BRAIN OF TWO HALVES
The cerebrum has two hemispheres. Each deals
mainly with the opposite side of the body—data
Thalamus Receives from the right eye, for example, is handled in
sensory nerve signals
and sends them on the brain’s left side. For some functions,
to the cerebrum
Medulla Controls including math, both halves work
breathing, heartbeat,
blood pressure, together. For others, one half is
and vomiting more active than the other.

LEFT-BRAIN SKILLS
The left side of your cerebrum is
Language
The left side handles the meanings
responsible for the logical, rational of words, but it is the right half that
aspects of your thinking, as well as for puts them together into sentences
grammar and vocabulary. It’s here that and stories.
you work out the answers to calculations.

Scientific Rational thought


thinking Thinking and reacting in a
Logical thinking is the job rational way appears to be
of the brain’s left side, but mainly a left-brain activity.
most science also involves It allows you to analyze a
the creative right side. problem and find an answer.

Mathematical Writing
skills skills
The left brain oversees Like spoken language, writing
numbers and calculations, involves both hemispheres. The right
while the right processes organizes ideas, while the left finds
shapes and patterns. the words to express them.
Left visual cortex Processes
signals from the right eye

MEET YOUR
Your brain is the most complex organ
in your body—a spongy, pink mass made
up of billions of microscopic nerve cells. Its

BRAIN
largest part is the cauliflower-like cerebrum,
made up of two hemispheres, or halves,
linked by a network of nerves. The cerebrum
is the part of the brain where math is
understood and calculations are made.

10
The outer surface Parietal lobe Gathers
together information
Thinking is carried out on the surface from senses such as
touch and taste
of the cerebrum, and the folds and
wrinkles are there to make this surface
as large as possible. In preserved
Occipital lobe Processes
brains, the outer layer is gray, so it information from the
is known as “gray matter.” eyes to create images

Right eye Collects data on


light-sensitive cells that is Frontal lobe Vital to
processed in the opposite thought, personality, Cerebellum Tucked
side of the brain—the left speech, and emotion beneath the cerebrum’s
visual cortex in the two halves, this
occipital lobe structure coordinates
Temporal lobe Where the body’s muscles
sounds are recognized,
Right optic nerve and where long-term
Carries information from memories are stored
the right eye to the left Spinal cord Joins the
visual cortex brain to the system
of nerves that runs
throughout the body

RIGHT-BRAIN SKILLS
The right side of your cerebrum is where Spatial skills
creativity and intuition take place, and is Understanding the shapes of
objects and their positions in
also used to understand shapes and motion.
space is a mainly right-brain
You carry out rough calculations here, too.
activity. It provides you your
ability to visualize.

Imagination Art
The right side of the brain The right side of the brain
directs your imagination. looks after spatial skills.
Putting your thoughts into It is more active during
words, however, is the job activities such as drawing,
of the left side of the brain. painting, or looking at art.

Music Insight
The brain’s right side is Moments of insight occur
where you appreciate music. in the right side of the brain.
Together with the left side, Insight is another word for
it works to make sense of those “eureka!” moments
the patterns that make the when you see the connections
music sound good. between very different ideas.

Doing
t
This brain he mat
scan was h
Neurons and numbers person wh carried ou
o was work t on a
Neurons are brain cells that link up to of subtrac in
tion proble g out a series
pass electric signals to each other. and orang ms. The ye
e areas sh llow
Every thought, idea, or feeling that the brain ow the pa
that were rts of
you have is the result of neurons most elec producing
trical nerv the
triggering a reaction in your brain. interestin e signals.
g is that a What’s
Scientists have found that when the brain reas all ove
are active r
you think of a particular number, —not just
one.
certain neurons fire strongly.

11
BRAIN GAMES

MATH
About 10 percent of people think of
numbers as having colors. With

SKILLS
some friends, try scribbling the
first number between 0 and 9 that
pops into your head when you
think of red, then black,
then blue. Do any of you
get the same
Many parts of your brain are involved in math, with big answers?
differences between the way it works with numbers (arithmetic),
and the way it grasps shapes and patterns (geometry). People
who struggle in one area can often be strong in another. And
sometimes there are several ways to tackle the same problem,
using different math skills.
88...85...
97...94...

How do you count?


When you count in your head, do
you imagine the sounds of the
numbers, or the way they look?
Try these two experiments and
see which you find easiest.

There are four main styles


of thinking, any of which can Step 1 Step 2
be used for learning math: seeing Try counting backward in 3s from Next, try both methods again
the words written, thinking in 100 in a noisy place with your eyes while watching TV with the sound
pictures, listening to the sounds shut. First, try “hearing” the off. Which of the four exercises
of words, and hands-on activities. numbers, then visualizing them. do you find easier?

A quick glance The part of the brain that can “see” numbers
Our brains have evolved to grasp key at a glance only works up to three or four, so
facts quickly—from just a glance at you probably got groups less than five right.
something—and also to think things You only roughly estimate higher numbers,
over while examining them. so are more likely to get these wrong.

Step 1 Step 2
Look at the sequences below— Now count the marks in each group
just glance at them briefly without and then check your answers.
counting—and write down the Which ones did you get right?
number of marks in each group.

12
Number cruncher Eye test You will need:
Your short-term memory can store a certain This activity tests your ability • Pack of at least 40 small
amount of information for a limited time. to judge quantities by eye. You pieces of candy
This exercise reveals your brain’s ability to should not count the objects— • Three bowls
remember numbers. Starting at the top, the idea is to judge equal • Stopwatch
read out loud a line of numbers one at a quantities by sight alone. • A friend
time. Then cover up the line and try to
repeat it. Work your way down the list
until you can’t remember all the numbers.
Step 1 Step 2
Set out the three bowls in front Now count up the number of
of you and ask your friend to candy pieces you have in each
time you for five seconds. When bowl. How equal were the
he says “go,” try to divide the quantities in all three?
candy evenly between them.
438
7209
18546 You’ll probably be surprised how
accurately you have split up the
907513 candy. Your brain has a strong sense
2146307 of quantity, even though it is not
thinking about it in terms
50918243 of numbers.
480759162
1728406395

Most people can hold about


seven numbers at a time in their
short-term memory. However, we
usually memorize things by saying
them in our heads. Some digits take
longer to say than others and this
affects the number we can remember.
So in Chinese, where the sounds of the
words for numbers are very short, it
is easier to memorize more numbers.

Spot the shape


In each of these sequences, 1
can you find the shape on the
far left hidden in one of the
five shapes to the right? A B C D E
2
We have a natural sense of
pattern and shape. The Ancient A B C D E
Greek philosopher Plato discovered
this a long time ago, when he 3
showed his slaves some shape
puzzles. The slaves got the answers
right, even though they’d had A B C D E
no schooling.
4

A B C D E

13
Brain size and evolution
Compared with the size of the body, the human
brain is much bigger than those of other animals.
We also have larger brains than our apelike
ancestors. A bigger brain indicates a greater
Frog Bird Human capacity for learning and problem solving.

LEARNING
For many, the thought of learning
math is daunting. But have you
ever wondered where math came

MATH
from? Did people make it up as they
went along? The answer is yes and
no. Humans—and some animals—
are born with the basic rules of
math, but most of it was invented.

A sense of numbers
Over the last few years, scientists have tested
babies and young children to investigate their
math skills. Their findings show that we humans
are all born with some knowledge of numbers.

Baby at 48 hours
Newborn babies have some sense
of numbers. They can recognize
that seeing 12 ducks is different
from 4 ducks.

Baby at six months


In one study, a baby was shown
two toys, then a screen was put
up and one toy was taken away.
The activity of the baby’s brain
revealed that it knew something
was wrong, and understood the
difference between one and two.

TY
ACTIVI
Animal antics
Many animals have a sense of
Can your pet count?
All dogs can “count” up to about three. To test your dog,
numbers. A crow called Jakob
or the dog of a friend, let the dog see you throw one, two,
could identify one among many
or three treats somewhere out of sight. Once the dog
identical boxes if it had five dots
has found the number of treats you threw, it will usually
on it. And ants seem to know
stop looking. But throw five or six treats and the dog will
exactly how many steps there
“lose count” and not know when to stop. It will keep on
are between them and their nest.
looking even after finding all the treats. Use dry treats
with no smell and make sure they fall out of sight.

14
Sensory memory Short-term memory Long-term memory
We keep a memory We can retain a handful With effort, we can
of almost everything of things (such as a memorize and learn an
we sense, but only for few digits or words) impressive number of
half a second or so. in our memory for about facts and skills. These
Sensory memory can a minute. After that, long-term memories
store about a dozen unless we learn them, can stay with us for
things at once. they are forgotten. our whole lives.

How memory works


Memory is essential to math. It allows us to keep
track of numbers while we work on them, and to
learn tables and equations. We have different
It can help you memorize
kinds of memory. As we do a math problem, for your tables if you speak or sing
example, we remember the last few numbers them. Or try writing them down,
only briefly (short-term memory), but we will
remember how to count from 1 to 10 and so on looking out for any patterns. And,
for the rest of our lives (long-term memory). of course, practice them again
and again.

Child at age four From five to nine


I’m going The average four-year-old When a five-year-old is asked to
to draw hundreds and can count to 10, though the put numbered blocks in order,
hundreds of dots! numbers may not always he or she will tend to space
be in the right order. He the lower numbers farther
or she can also estimate apart than the higher ones.
larger quantities, such By the age of about nine,
as hundreds. Most children recognize that the
importantly, at four difference between numbers
a child becomes is the same—one—and space
interested in making the blocks equally.
marks on paper,
showing numbers
in a visual way.

Clever Hans tical horse


o, there was a mathema
Just over a century ag ltip ly, and
d to add, subtract, mu
named Hans. He seeme of. Ho we ver,
answer with his ho
divide, then tap out his ow nst to his ow ner, the
th. Unbekn
Hans wasn’t good at ma lan age.
gu
ellent at “reading” body
horse was actually exc he had
ner’s face change when
He would watch his ow sto p.
of taps, and then
made the right number

15
Your brain:
• Has about 100 billion neurons
• Each neuron, or brain cell, can
send about 100 signals per second
• Signals travel at speeds of about
33 ft (10 m) per second
• Continues working and transmitting
signals even while you sleep

BRAIN
In a battle of the superpowers—brain versus
VS.
Prodigies machine—the human brain would be the winner!
A prodigy is someone who has an incredible Although able to perform calculations at lightning
skill from an early age—for example, great
ability in math, music, or art. India’s speeds, the supercomputer, as yet, is unable to
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887–1920) had hardly think creatively or match the mind of a genius.
any schooling, yet became an exceptional
mathematician. Prodigies have active memories So, for now, we humans remain one step ahead.
that can hold masses of data at once.

Hard work
ion and
More often than not, dedicat
to exc eptional
hard work are the key
7, a ma the ma tician
success. In 163
rre de Fer ma t pro pos ed
named Pie
it. For
a theorem but did not prove
, many
more than three centuries
tici ans trie d and
great mathema
solve the pro ble m. Bri tain’s
failed to
cin ate d
Andrew Wiles became fas
ore m wh en he
by Fermat’s Last The
lly solved it mo re
was 10. He fina
than 30 years later in 1995.

Savants What about your brain?


Someone who is incredibly skilled in a If someone gives you some numbers to add
specialized field is known as a savant. up in your head, you keep them all “in mind”
Born in 1979, Daniel Tammet is a British savant while you do the math. They are held in your
who can perform mind-boggling feats of short-term memory (see page 15). If you can
calculation and memory, such as memorizing hold more than eight numbers in your head,
22,514 decimal places of pi (3.141...), see pages you've got a great math brain.
76–77. Tammet has synesthesia, which means
he sees numbers with colors and shapes.

16
Your computer:
• Has about 10 billion transistors
• Each transistor can send about
one billion signals per second
• Signals travel at speeds of about
120,000 miles (200,000 km)
per second
• Stops working when it is
turned off

MACHINE Computers
When they were first invented, computers were
called electronic brains. It is true that, like the
human brain, a computer’s job is to process
data and send out control signals. But, while
computers can do some of the same things
as brains, there are more differences than
similarities between the two. Machines are
not ready to take over the world just yet.

Artificial
intelligence
r
An artificially intelligent compute Missing ingredient
is one that seems to thin k like a
Computers are far better than humans
person. Even the most powerful at calculations, but they lack many of
computer has nothing like the our mental skills and cannot come up with
all-round intelligence of a human original ideas. They also find it almost
being, but some can carry out impossible to disentangle the visual world—
certain tasks in a humanlike even the most advanced computer would
way. The computer system be at a loss to identify the contents
Watson, for example, learns of a messy bedroom!
from its mistakes, makes choices,
and narrows down options. In
2011, it beat human contestants
to win the quiz show Jeopardy.

17
Numerophobia Dyscalculia
A phobia is a fear of something that there is no reason to Which of these two numbers is higher? 76 46
be scared of, such as numbers. The most feared numbers If you can’t tell within a second, you might have dyscalculia,
are 4, especially in Japan and China, and 13. Fear of the where the area of your brain that compares numbers does
number 13 even has its own name—triskaidekaphobia. not work properly. People with dyscalculia can also have
Although no one is scared of all numbers, a lot of people difficulty telling time. But remember, dyscalculia is very
are scared of using them! rare, so it is not a good excuse for missing the bus.

PROBLEMS WITH
NUMBERS
Barriers to math
German mathematician Am
alie
“Emmy” Noether graduated
in
ath 1907, but at first no university
ithout m would
A life w are born with a sense of offer her—or any woman—a
job in
hough babies
Alt s need to
ed idea
mathematics. It took many
years for
ore complicat her to get a paid job and bec
numbers, m cieties use an
d teach ome a
ht . M os t so l of them. professor. Despite this, she
be taug
ic al id ea s—but not al developed
these mathe
m at Tanzania, several groundbreaking ma
, th e H ad za people of thematical
Until recent ly , so their theorems that helped scientis
ple, di d no t use counting or 4. ts.
for exam beyond 3
d no numbers
language ha

18
1x7=7 2 x 7 = 14
3 x 7 = 21 4 x 7 = 28
5 x 7 = 35 6 x 7 = 42
7 x 7 = 49 8 x 7 = 56

Visualizing math Practice makes perfect


Sometimes math questions sound complicated or use For those of us who struggle with calculations, the contestants
unfamiliar words or symbols. Drawing or visualizing who take part in math contests can seem like geniuses.
(picturing in your head) can help with understanding and In fact, anyone can be a math whiz if they follow the three
solving math problems. Questions about dividing shapes secrets to success: practice, learning some basic calculations
equally, for example, are simple enough to draw, and a by heart (such as multiplication tables), and using tips
rough sketch is all you need to get an idea of the answer. and shortcuts.

A lot of people think math is tricky, and many try The 13th-century thinker
to avoid the subject. It is true that some people have Roger Bacon said, “He who
learning difficulties with math, but they are very is ignorant of [math] cannot
know the other sciences, nor
rare. With a little time and practice, you can soon come the affairs of this world.”
to grips with the basic rules of math, and once you’ve
mastered those, then the skills are yours for life!

TY
ACTIVI

Misleading numbers The bigger picture


Numbers can influence how and what you think. In World War I, soldiers wore cloth hats, which
You need to be sure what numbers mean so they contributed to a high number of head injuries. HEAD
Better protection was required, so cloth hats ON INJ
T H E URIES
cannot be used to mislead you. Look at these two
stories. You should be suspicious of the numbers were replaced by tin helmets. However, this
led to a dramatic rise in head injuries. Why RISE
in both of them—can you figure out why? !
do you think this happened?

A useful survey? PA RK S TO CLOS E!


Following a survey carried out by the
Association for More Skyscrapers (AMS),
it is suggested that most of the 30 parks
in the city should close. The survey found
that, of the three parks surveyed, two had
fewer than 25 visitors all day. Can you
identify four points that should make
you think again about AMS’s survey?

19
Early
People have been studying math
for a long time, ever since our earliest
ancestors learned to count! Later, in
societies all around the world, great
thinkers came up with ideas for how
shapes, numbers, and equations worked.
mathematicians Many of these historical geniuses are still
remembered for their achievements and
how they paved the way for the math
geniuses of today.

Aryabhata
Born in 476 ce, during the golden age of Indian
math, Aryabhata was a talented mathematician and
astronomer. His famous book Aryabhatiya describes
many ideas about number systems, including how Euclid
to calculate the square and cube roots of numbers. This ancient Greek thinker born in 325 bce worked
He is also known for his work on the concept of zero, mostly on math relating to shapes (geometry). In the
later expanded upon by other Indian mathematicians Elements, a series of 13 books, he defined geometry’s
such as Brahmagupta. rules, explaining and expanding the work of earlier
mathematicians. Written in clear language and set
out in a logical order, the Elements became one of
the most successful and long-lasting textbooks in
history. For the next 2,000 years, it was a must-read
for math students all over the world, and we still use
many of his definitions and explanations today.

India’s first satellite, Euclid precisely


defined all the circumference
launched in 1975,
was named after parts of a circle,
including the
us

Aryabhata. It stayed
in Earth’s orbit for circumference,
di

almost 17 years. the diameter,


ra

and the radius. sec


tor
er
et
am
di
d
chor
ta segment
ng
en
t
20
Hypatia studied the
way a cone can be cut
to produce different
types of curves.

Zu Chongzhi
calculated that
the value of pi
was between
3.1415926
and 3.1415927.

Hypatia Zu Chongzhi
Born in about 355 ce in Alexandria, then a part of the One of many influential ancient Chinese
Roman empire, Hypatia was famous during her lifetime mathematicians, Zu Chongzhi was also an inventor
as the world’s leading mathematician and astronomer. and a writer. He came up with many clever ways
She reworked ancient texts on geometry and number to calculate things, such as the volume of a sphere.
theory to make them easier to understand, and became In about 475 ce, he calculated the value of pi
the head of an important school of philosophy, where to 7 decimal places, which remained the most
thinkers and students came together to work out the accurate approximation for almost 1,000 years!
nature of the world around them.

The word “algebra” comes


from the Arabic word al-jabr, which
was part of the title of al-Khwarizmi’s
book al-Kitab al-Mukhtasar fi Hisab
al-Jabr wal-Muqabalah, or The
Compendious Book on Calculation
by Completion and Balancing.

If you draw squares with


sides the length of the
Fibonacci numbers and
put them next to each
other, a spiral can be
drawn through them.

Muhammad ibn Musa Fibonacci


al-Khwarizmi Italian mathematician Fibonacci lived
al-Khwarizmi was born around 780 ce and lived in the 13th century and traveled widely
and worked in Baghdad, then the capital of the around the world. He introduced the Indo-
Persian empire. He helped to transform math Arabic number system to Europe, but is best
across the globe by introducing the Indo-Arabic known for discovering a sequence of numbers
number system from 0-9 that we use today. He where each number is found by adding together
also described the mathematical system of the last two. This sequence is found in nature
problem-solving that we now call algebra. and creates spiraling patterns.
BRAIN GAMES

What do you see?


The first step to sharpening the
SEEING THE
SOLUTION
visual areas of your brain is to practice
recognizing visual information. Each
of these pictures is made up of the
outlines of three different objects.
Can you figure out what they are?

Thinking in 2-D
Lay out 16 matches to make five squares
as shown here. By moving only two
matches, can you turn the five squares
into four? No matches can be removed.

Visual sequencing
To do this puzzle, you need to visualize objects and
imagine moving them around. If you placed these three
tiles on top of each other, starting with the largest at
3
the bottom, which of the four images at the bottom
would you see?

1 2 3 4

22
Math doesn't have to be just strings of
3-D vision
numbers. Sometimes, it's easier to solve Test your skills at mentally rotating a
a math problem when you can see it 3-D shape. If you folded up this shape
to make a cube, which of the four
as a picture—a technique known as options below would you see?
visualization. This is because visualizing
math uses different parts of the brain,
which can make it easier to find logical
solutions. Can you see the answers
to these six problems?

1 2 3 4

Recent studies show that


playing video games
develops visual
Seeing is understanding
A truly enormous snake has been spotted climbing awareness and increases
up a tree. One half of the snake is yet to arrive at the
tree. Two-thirds of the other half is wrapped around short-term memory and
the tree trunk and 5 ft (1.5 m) of snake is hanging
down from the branch. How long is the snake? attention span.

Illusion confusion
Forty percent of your Optical illusions, such as this elephant,
put your brain to work as it tries to
brain is dedicated to make sense of an image that is in fact
nonsense. Illusions also stimulate
seeing and processing the creative side of your brain and
visual material. force you to see things differently.
Can you figure out how many legs
this elephant has?

23
Inventing
numbers
LEARNING TO

COUNT
We are born with some understanding of
numbers, but almost everything else about
math needs to be learned. The rules and skills
we are taught at school had to be worked out
over many centuries. Even rules that seem
simple, such as which number follows 9, how
to divide a cake in three, or how to draw a
square, all had to be invented, long ago. 1. Fingers and tallies
People have been counting on their fingers for more than
100,000 years, keeping track of their herds, or marking the days.
Since we humans have 10 fingers, we use 10 digits to count—
the numerals 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. In fact, the word
digit means “finger.” When early peoples ran out of fingers, they
made scratches called tallies instead. The earliest-known tally
marks, on a baboon’s leg bone, are 37,000 years old.

1/
8

¼ 1
/16
½
1/
32
1/
64

4. Egyptian math 5. Greek math


Fractions tell us how to divide things—for example, how Around 600 bce, the Greeks started to develop the type
to share a loaf between four people. Today, we would say of math we use today. A big breakthrough was that they
each person should get one quarter, or ¼. The Egyptians, didn’t just have ideas about numbers and shapes—they
working out fractions 4,500 years ago, used the eye of also proved those ideas were true. Many of the laws that
a god called Horus. Different parts of the eye stood for the Greeks proved have stood the test of time—we still rely
fractions, but only those produced by halving a number on Euclid’s ideas on shapes (geometry) and Pythagoras’s
one or more times. work on triangles, for example.

26
2. From counters to numbers 3. Babylonian number rules
The first written numbers were used in the Near East The place-value system (see page 31) was invented in
about 10,000 years ago. People there used clay counters to Babylon about 5,000 years ago. This rule allowed the position
stand for different things: For instance, eight oval-shaped of a numeral to affect its value—that’s why 2,200 and 2,020
counters meant eight jars of oil. At first, the counters were mean different things. We count in base-10, using single
wrapped with a picture, until people realized that the digits up to 9 and then double digits (10, 11, 12, and so on),
pictures could be used without the counters. So the picture but the Babylonians used base-60. They wrote their numbers
that meant eight jars became the number 8. as wedge-shaped marks.

The Egyptians used symbols of


walking feet to represent addition
and subtraction. They understood
calculation by imagining a person
walking right (addition) or left
(subtraction) a number line.

Y
ACTIVIT

Fizz-Buzz!
Try counting with a difference.
The more people there are, the
more fun it is. The idea is that you
Fizz-Buzz!
all take turns counting, except Fizz-Buzz!
that when someone gets to a
multiple of three they shout
“Fizz,” and when they get to
a multiple of five they
6. New math shout “Buzz.” If a number
Gradually, the ideas of the Greeks spread far and wide, is a multiple of both
leading to new mathematical developments in the Middle three and five, shout
East and India. In 1202, Leonardo of Pisa (an Italian “Fizz-Buzz.”If you get it
mathematician also known as Fibonacci) introduced wrong, you’re out. The
the eastern numbers and discoveries to Europe in his last remaining player is
Book of Calculation. This is why our numbering system the winner.
is based on an ancient Indian one.

27
FACTS AND FIGURES

NUMBER
The numbers we know and love today
developed over many centuries from
ancient systems. The earliest system

SYSTEMS
of numbers that we know today is the
Babylonian one, invented in Ancient
Iraq at least 5,000 years ago.

Table of
numbers
Ancient number
systems were nearly 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
all based on the
same idea: a symbol
for 1 was invented Babylonian
and repeated to
represent small
or low numbers. Ancient
For larger numbers, Egyptian
usually starting at
10, a new symbol
Ancient
was invented. This,
Greek
too, could be written
down several times.
Roman

Chinese

Mayan

Intelligent eight-tentacled Base-60


creatures would almost The Babylonians counted in base-60.
certainly count in base-8.
They gave their year 360 days (6 x 60).
We don’t know for sure how they used
The Babylonians their hands to count. One
counted in 12s on
one hand, using theory is that they used
finger segments. a thumb to count in units
1 up to 12 on one hand,
Counting in tens 4 and the fingers and thumb
Most of us learn to count 2 7 of the other hand to count
using our hands. We have
5
8 in 12s up to a total of 60.
10 fingers and thumbs 3
6 10
(digits), so we have 10 9
numerals (also called 11
12 36
digits). This way of counting 24
is known as the base-10 or
48
decimal system, after 12
decem, Latin for “ten.” Their other hand kept
track of the 12s—one
12 per finger or thumb.

60
28
Building by numbers
The Ancient Egyptians used their mathematical
knowledge for building. For instance, they knew how
to work out the volume of a pyramid of any height or
width. The stones used to build the Pyramids at Giza
were measured so precisely that you cannot fit a credit
card between them.

No numbers
Imagine a world with no
20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 numbers. There would be…

No dates, and no birthdays


No money, no buying
or selling
No scores or times in
sport, which would
make things very dull
No way of measuring
distance—just keep
walking until you
get there!
No measurements of
heights or angles, so your
house would be unstable
No science, so no amazing
inventions or technology,
and no phone numbers

Tech talk
Computers have their own
two-digit system, called
binary. This is because
Going Greek computer systems are
Oddly enough, the Ancient Greeks used the made of switches that
same symbols for numbers as for letters. have only two positions:
So β was 2—when it wasn’t being b! on (1) or off (0).
alpha and 1 digamma and 6

beta and 2 zeta and 7 Roman numerals


In the Roman number system, if a
gamma and 3 eta and 8 numeral is placed before a larger one,
delta and 4 theta and 9 it means it should be subtracted from
it. So IV is four (“I” less than “V”). This
epsilon and 5 iota and 10
can get tricky, though. The Roman way
of writing 199, for example, is CXCIX.

29
BIG

ZEROAlthough it may seem like nothing, zero


is probably the most important number
What is zero?
Zero can mean nothing, but not always! It can also
of all. It was the last digit to be discovered be valuable. Zero plays an important role in calculations
and in everyday life. Temperature, time, and football
and it’s easy to see why—just try counting scores can all have a value of zero—without it, everything
to zero on your fingers! Even after its would be very confusing!
introduction, this mysterious number wasn’t
properly understood. At first it was used as a Any number times
placeholder but later became a full number. zero is zero.

A number
Is zero a minus itself
number? is zero.

Yes, but it’s neither


odd nor even. Zero isn’t
positive or
negative.

And you can’t


divide numbers
by zero.

Filling the gap


An early version of zero was a rst
agupt re the fi
invented in Babylon more Brahmathematicians we e number,
u
than 5,000 years ago. It Indian m se zero as a tr nd 650 ce,
looked like this pictogram e o p le to u e r. A rou
(right) and it played one of the
p
s t a p lacehold ian named
not ju matic
n mathe t how
roles that zero does for us—it an India pta worked ou n
g u ons. Eve swers
spaced out other numbers. Without it, the numbers Brahma ed in calculati ’s an
hav gupta
12, 102, and 120 would all be written in the same zero be m e o f Brahma ste p forward
.
u g h s o a b ig
way: 12. But this Babylonian symbol did not have all tho was
ong, this
the other useful characteristics zero has today. were wr

30
Place value
In our decimal system, the value of a digit depends
on its place in the number. Each place has a value of
10 times the place to the right. This place-value system
only works when you have zero to “hold” the place for
a value when no other digit goes in that position. So
on this abacus, the 2 represents the thousands in the
number, the 4 represents the hundreds, the 0 holds
2 4 0 6 the place for tens, and the 6 represents the ones,
making the number 2,406.

ZERO
Without zero, we wouldn’t
be able to tell the difference
between numbers such At zero hundred Zero height is sea
as 11 and 101… hours—00:00— level and zero gravity
it’s midnight. exists in space.

… and there’d be the same


distance between –1 and 1
as between 1 and 2.

In a countdown,
a rocket launches
at “zero!”

TY
ACTIVI
212°F 373K
Roman homework Absolute zero (100°C) Water boils
The Romans had no zero and used We usually measure temperatures
letters to represent numbers: I was in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit, 32°F
273K
1, V was 5, X was 10, C was 100, and but scientists often use the Kelvin (0°C) Water freezes
D was 500 (see pages 28–29). But scale. The lowest number on
numbers weren’t always what they this scale, 0K, is known as absolute
seemed. For example, IX means zero. In theory, this is the lowest -108°F
195K
C02 freezes
“one less than 10,” or 9. Without possible temperature in the (-78°C) (dry ice)
zero, calculations were difficult. Universe, but in reality the closest
Try adding 309 and 805 in Roman scientists have achieved are
numerals (right) and you’ll temperatures a few millionths of a -459°F
0K
understand why they didn’t catch on. Kelvin warmer than absolute zero. (-273°C) Absolute zero

31
Pythagoras
Pythagoras is perhaps the most famous mathematician
of the ancient world, and is best known for his theorem
on right-angled triangles. Ever curious about the world
around him, Pythagoras learned much on his travels.
He studied music in Egypt and may have been the first
to invent a musical scale.
ravels
Early t570 bce on the Greek island
n around
Bor ythagoras at P
is thought th
of Samos, it ab yl on (modern-day
Egypt, B in search of
traveled to s even In iad
p er h ap s, he
Iraq), an d in his fortie
le d g e. W hen he was in Italy that
know
d in C ro to n, a town
finally settle ol.
Greek contr
was under

Pythagoras thought
of odd numbers as
male, and even
thagoras was ma to
circle of
de up of an innerlisten to them
The school of Py and a larger group who came did his work in
numbers as female.
mathematicians, to some accounts, Pythagoras
speak. According iet of a cave. For Pythagoras,
the peace and qu the most perfect
shape-making
pupils number was 10,
Prestigious formed a school where mainly its dots forming
, Pythagoras ied.
a triangle known
In Croton ism were stud as the tetractys.
re ligion and mystic
m at h bu t al so uals in the school
were treated as eq c
Women and men entored and
thought to have m c
and Pythagoras is kn own woman
possibly the first
married Theano— so ph er. Little is
at ici an an d also a philo
m at he m s believe she
life, but historian
known about her do with the
l works, likely to a
published severa ratio.
ept of the golden
geometrical conc
c
a a c
Pythagorean theorem
Pythagoras’s name lives on today in b The square of the
his famous theorem. It says that, in a long side (c), the
a hypotenuse, can
right-angled triangle, the square of the be made by adding
hypotenuse (the longest side, opposite The triangle’s
the squares of the
other two sides
the right angle) is equal to the sum of right angle is (a and b).
opposite the
the squares of the other two sides. longest side, b b
The theorem can be written the hypotenuse.
mathematically as a + b = c .
2 2 2

32 b
Dangerous numbers
Pythagoras believed that all
numbers were rational—that
they could be written as a
fraction. For example, 5 can
be written as 5⁄1, and 1.5 as 3⁄2.
But one of his cleverest
students, Hippasus, is said
to have proved that the
square root of 2 could not
be shown as a fraction and
was therefore irrational.
Pythagoras could not accept
this, and by some accounts
was so upset he committed
suicide. Rumor also has it
that Hippasus was drowned
for proving the existence
of irrational numbers.

sets of pots
realized that
Pythagoreansded harmonious if theys.
of water so un mple ratio
cording to si
were filled ac
Pythago
the idea ras was one of
music that the th
Earth m e first to propo
Math andowed that musical ay be a s
phere.
se
sh
Pythagoras ious
und harmon
notes that so r) ob ey simple
the ea
(pleasant to example,
The number legacy
al rules. For
mathematic be made Pythagoreans believed that the world
note can
a harmonious s w he re one contained only five regular polyhedra (solid
two string
by plucking other— objects with identical flat faces), each with
length of the
is twice the e strings
a particular number of sides, as shown here.
ds, where th
in other wor For them, this was proof of their idea that
of 2:1.
are in a ratio numbers explained everything. This theory
Tetrahedron lives on, as today’s scientists all explain the
4 triangular faces
world in terms of mathematics.

Pythagoras believed that the


Earth was at the center of a set of
spheres that made a harmonious
sound as they turned. Cube
6 square faces
Octahedron
8 triangular faces
Dodecahedron
12 pentagonal faces
Icosahedron
20 triangular faces

33
BRAIN GAMES

1. Changing places 2. Pop!

THE BOX
THINKING OUTSIDE You are running in a race and
overtake the person in second place.
How can you stick
10 pins into a balloon
What position are you in now? without popping it?

4. Sister act
ds?
t h e od n. She A mother and father have
are ildre two daughters who were
. What her with two chboy. What is born on the same day of
3 ot a
et a m
e em is h a boy?
You m that one of t other is also the same month of the
s yo u t th e
tell y tha same year, but are not
e p robabilit
th twins. How are they
related to each other?

Some problems can’t be


solved by working through
them step-by-step, and need
to be looked at in a different 6. How many?
If 10 children can eat 10
way—sometimes we can bananas in 10 minutes,
simply “see” the answer. This how many children would
be needed to eat 100
intuitive way of figuring things bananas in 100 minutes?
5. In the money
out is one of the most difficult You have two identical money
parts of the brain’s workings bags. One is filled with small
coins. The other is filled with
to explain. Sometimes, seeing coins that are twice the size
an answer is easier if you try and value of the others. Which
to approach the problem in an of the bags is worth more?

unusual way—this is called 8. The lonely man


lateral thinking. There was a man who never left his
house. The only visitor he had was
7. Left or right? someone delivering supplies every two
A left-handed glove can be weeks. One dark and stormy night, he
changed into a right-handed lost control of his senses, turned off
one by looking at it in a mirror. all the lights, and went to sleep. The
Can you think of another way? next morning it was discovered that
his actions had resulted in the deaths
of several people. Why?

34
10. Half full
Three of the glasses below are filled with orange
juice and the other three are empty. By touching
just one glass, can you arrange it so that the full
and empty glasses alternate?
9. A cut above
A New York City hairdresser recently
said that he would rather cut the hair
of three Canadians than one New
Yorker. Why would he say this?

12. Whodunnit?
Acting on an anonymous phone call, the police raid
a house to arrest a suspected murderer. They don’t
11. At a loss know what he looks like but they know his name is
A man buys sacks of rice John and that he is inside the house. Inside they find
for $1 a pound from a carpenter, a truck driver, a mechanic, and a fireman
American farmers and then playing poker. Without hesitation or communication of
sells them for $0.05 a pound any kind, they immediately arrest the fireman. How do
in India. As a result, he they know they have their man?
becomes a millionaire. How?

14. Crash!
A plane takes off from London headed
for Japan. After a few hours there is an
engine malfunction and the plane
13. Frozen! crashes on the Italian/Swiss border.
You are trapped in a cabin on a cold snowy Where do they bury the survivors?
mountain with the temperature falling and night

FRAGILE
coming on. You have a matchbox containing just
a single match. You find the following things in
the cabin. What do you light first?

• A candle
• A gas lamp
• A windproof lantern
e lar
• A wood fire with fire starters
. Hom rectangu es
• A signal flare to attract rescuers 6
1 n built a s i d
four l ing
A ma with al ne morn dow
s e O n
h o u u . f the wi t
t h
g so o a
facin ked out ear. Wh
e lo o d a b
h te
spot
and was it?
r
colo

15. Leave it to them


Some children are raking leaves in their
street. They gather seven piles at one house,
four piles at another, and five piles at
another. When the children put all the piles
together, how many will they have?

35
NUMBER

PATTERNS
Thousands of years ago, some Ancient
Greeks thought of numbers as having shapes, Square numbers
If a particular number of objects can be
perhaps because different shapes can be made arranged to make a square with no gaps,
by arranging particular numbers of objects. that number is called a square number.
You can also make a square number by
Sequences of numbers can make patterns, too. “squaring” a number—which means
multiplying a number by itself: 1 x 1 = 1,
2 x 2 = 4, 3 x 3 = 9, and so on.
4
16 objects can 1 2 3 5
be arranged to
make a 4 x 4
square.

1 2 3 6 7 8 9 10
4

3 5 6 7 8 11 12 13 14 15
1 2

1 4 5 6 9 10 11 12 16 17 18 19 20
2

1 7 8 9 13 14 15 16 21 22 23 24 25
3 4
1 4 9 16 25

c ones
magi rs made
1 = 1
2 The ring numbeyou
a u ,
By sq g but ones digits
i n er
112 = 121 of n o t h
k e a
o t h
ll the Stranger
a !
can m eventually pear in
1112 = 12321 app e a r—
dig i ts a p
e sam
e
i l l , t h o s e
t re ad th em
11112 = 1234321 s t
ers th
numb er you loo ward.
a
k at t
h

whe t h ba kc
111112 = 123454321 forwa
rd or
1111112 = 12345654321

odd
et h ing re numbers
Som st five squa 5. Work out
The fir 9, 16, and 2 n each
4, betwe
e
are 1, rence
d if fe n ce
the que
the se een 1
pair in rence betw . Write
fe e)
(the d if xampl
4 is 3, for e in order.
and s out n?
nswer patter
your a pot an odd
u s 3 5 7 9
Can yo
36
Triangular numbers TY
ACTIVI
If you can make an equilateral triangle (a triangle
with sides of equal length) from a particular
number of objects, that number is known as
triangular. You can make triangular numbers by
adding numbers that are consecutive (next to each
other): 0 + 1 = 1, 0 + 1 + 2 = 3, 0 + 1 + 2 + 3 = 6, and
so on. Many Ancient Greek mathematicians were
fascinated by triangular numbers, but we don’t
use them much today, except to admire the pattern!

1
6
Prison break
3 1 2 3 At the prison, 20 prisoners are locked
1 in 20 cells. The 20 prison guards looking
after them have a strange way of locking
1 2 3 4 5 6 up. The first guard unlocks all the cells.
The second guard then locks every
second door (2, 4, 6, etc.). The third turns
the key in every third door, locking it if it
is unlocked and unlocking it if it is locked.
The fourth guard turns the key in every
1 fourth door, and so on until all 20 guards
have left. Which cells remain open
1 3 allowing the prisoners to escape? Can
2
15 you spot a pattern in these numbers?
10 2 3 4 5 6

4 5 6 7 8 10
9
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Cubic numbers
1 If a number of objects, such as building blocks,
can be assembled to make a cube shape, then that
number is called a cubic number. Cubic numbers Shaking hands
can also be made by multiplying a number by itself A group of three friends meet and
twice. For example, 2 x 2 x 2 = 8. everyone shakes hands with everyone
8 else once. How many handshakes are
there in total? Try drawing this out, with
a dot for each person and lines between
them for handshakes. Now work out the
handshakes for groups of four, five, or six
people. Can you spot a pattern?

A perfect solution?
The numbers 1, 2, 3, and 6 all divide
27 into the number 6, so we call them its
factors. A perfect number is one that’s
the sum of its factors (other than itself).
So, 1 + 2 + 3 = 6, making 6 a perfect
number. Can you figure out the next
perfect number?

37
BRAIN GAMES

CALCULATION
TIPS
Mathematicians use all kinds of tricks
and shortcuts to reach their answers
quickly. Most can be learned easily
and are worth learning to save time
and impress your friends and teachers. To work out 9 x 9,
bend down your
ninth finger.

2 3 8
4 7

Multiplication tips 6 9
5
Mastering your times tables is an essential math
skill, but these tips will also help you out in a pinch:
1
• To quickly multiply by 4, simply double 10
the number, and then double it again.

• If you have to multiply a number by 5,


find the answer by halving the number and then
multiplying it by 10. So 24 x 5 would be 24 ÷ 2 = 12,
then 12 x 10 = 120.

• An easy way to multiply a number by 11 is


to take the number, multiply it by 10, and then
add the original number once more. Multiply by 9 with your hands
Here’s a trick that will make multiplying by 9 a breeze.
• To multiply large numbers when one is even, halve
the even number and double the other one. Repeat if Step 1
the halved number is still even. So, 32 x 125 is the Hold your hands face up in front of you. Find out
same as 16 x 250, which is the same as 8 x 500, which what number you need to multiply by 9 and bend the
is the same as 4 x 1,000. They all equal 4,000. corresponding finger. So to work out 9 x 9, turn down
your ninth finger.

Step 2
Take the number of fingers on the left side of the
bent finger, and combine (not add) it with the one on
the right. For example, if you bent your ninth finger,
you’d combine the number of fingers on the left, 8,
with the number of fingers on the right, 1. So you’d
olve
x Lemairee, people can s have 81 (9 x 9 is 81).
Ale nty of practic s without a ician
ple lem at
With prob athem
g math ench m umber that,
amazin r. In 2007, Fr h e n
to out t a
calcula aire worked t im e s, gives he
x L e m e lf 1 3 a ve t
Ale y its He g
m u lt iplied b igit number.
if d !
lar 200 econds
particu nswer in 70 s
ta
correc

38
Division tips In Asia, children use an abacus
There are lots of tips that can help
speed up your division: (a frame of bars of beads) to
• To find out if a number is divisible by 3, add and subtract faster than
add up the digits. If they add up to a multiple an electronic calculator.
of 3, the number will be divisible by 3.
For instance, 5,394 must be divisible
by 3 because 5 + 3 + 9 + 4 = 21,
and 21 is divisible by 3.

• A number is divisible by 6
if it’s divisible by 3 and the
last digit is even.
tip
ting a fter
• A number is divisible by 9 if all the digits add up to Calcula leave a 15 percent tip ay
to as
a multiple of 9. For instance, 201,915 must be divisible If you need here’s an e
m e a l a t a restaurant, p e rce n t (divide
by 9 because 2 + 0 + 1 + 9 + 1 + 5 = 18, and 18 is a rk out 1 0
t: J u st w o t n u mber to
divisible by 9. shortcu 1 0 ), th e n add tha
the numbe
rb y r answer.
e , a n d yo u have you
• To find out if a number is divisible by 11, start with the half its valu
digit on the left, subtract the next digit from it, then add the
next, subtract the next, and so on. If the answer is 0 or 11,
then the original number is divisible by 11. For example, 10
%
35,706 is divisible by 11 because 3 – 5 + 7 – 0 + 6 = 11. $3 of
$3 .5 $3
.5 0 5
0 ÷ =
+ 2 $3
$1 = .5
.7 $1 0
5 .7
= 5
$5
.2
5

Fast
s
If you ne quari
ed to sq ng
number uare a tw
that end o-
the first s in 5, ju digit
digit by st multip
put 25 o itself plu ly
n the en s 1, then
15, do: 1 d. So to
x (1 + 1) square
25 to giv = 2 , the
e 225. T n attach
work ou his Beat the clock
t the squ is how you can
are of 25 Test your powers of mental arithmetic in this game against
:
the clock. It’s more fun if you play with a group of friends.
2 x
(2+1
6 an ) = Step 1
d 25 6 First, one of you must choose two of the following numbers: 25, 50, 75, 100.
= 62 Next, someone else selects four numbers between 1 and 10. Now get
5 a friend to pick a number between
100 and 999. Write this down next
to the six smaller numbers.

Step 2
You all now have two minutes to
add, subtract, multiply, or divide
your chosen numbers—which you
can use only once—to get as close
as possible to the big number. The
winner is the person with the
exact or closest number.

39
Archimedes once said, “Give me a lever long
enough... and I shall move the world.”

Archimedes Archimedes was probably the greatest


mathematician of the ancient world. Unlike
most of the others, he was a highly practical
person too, using his math skills to build
all kinds of contraptions, including some
extraordinary war machines.

t, he would have
When Archimedes was in Egyp ia, the greatest
studied in the library in Alexandr
library of the ancient world.

On discovering how to measure volume, Archimedes is


said to have jumped out of his bath and run naked down
Early life the street, shouting, “Eureka!” (I’ve found it!).
Archimedes was born in Syracuse, Sicily,
in 287 bce. As a young man he traveled to
Egypt and worked with mathematicians there. Eureka!
According to one story, when Archimedes Archimedes’ most famous discovery came
returned home to Syracuse, he heard that the about when the king asked him to check if his
Egyptian mathematicians were claiming some crown was pure gold. To answer this, he
of his discoveries as their own. To catch them, had to measure the crown’s volume, but
he sent them some calculations with errors in how? Stepping into a full bath, Archimedes
them. The Egyptians claimed these new realized that the water that spilled from the
discoveries too, but were caught when people tub could be measured to find out the volume
discovered that the calculations were wrong. of his body—or a crown.

n screw is
An Archimedeaa screw
inventions
Ingenious ited with building the a cylinder with w raises
inside. The scre .
imedes is cred
Arch at achine th water as it turns
anetarium—a m
world’s first pl n, Moon, and
e m ot ions of the Su
sh ow s th vent, despite it
ing he didn’t in
planets. One th edean screw.
e, is the Archim
bearing his nam this design
or e likel y th at he introduced
It is m it in Egypt.
r a w at er pu m p, having seen
fo

40
Thinking big
One of Archimedes’ projects was to
try to find out how many grains of
sand would fill the Universe. His
actual finding is wrong because the Archimedes came up
Ancient Greeks knew little about the
Universe. However, in working out with an early form of
his answer, Archimedes learned
how to write very large numbers. calculus 2,000 years
This is important for scientists.
For instance, the volume of the
before it was developed
Earth is about 1,000,000,000,
000,000,000,000,000 cubic
by other scientists!
centimeters. Scientists write this
much more simply, as 1 x 1024—
1 followed by 24 zeroes. This
idea is known as standard
notation (see page 43).

Math in action
In Syracuse, Archimedes claimed
he could move a fully laden ship
across the harbor single-handed.
He managed it thanks to a compound
pulley, which enormously increased
the force he could apply. Their secret
is that they turn a small force working
over a large distance into a large force
that works over a small distance.
Archimedes was killed during the
of Syracuse. One story goes that Roman occupation
the old man’s last
words were “Do not disturb my circle
Using this s.”
compound pulley,
a force of just
50 newtons (50N)
can lift a weight
of 100N. Archimedes at war
When Archimedes was an old man,
Syracuse was attacked by the Roman army.
Archimedes helped in the defense of the
city by building war machines. One was a
great claw to drag enemy ships off course
and sink them. Another was a giant mirror
that set the sails of attacking craft on fire.
Despite Archimedes’ best efforts, the
50N Romans won and took over the city.
Archimedes died in 212 bce. It is said he
was killed by a Roman soldier who lost
his temper when the old man refused to
leave his calculations.
100N

41
MATH THAT
We use measurements every day,
from checking the time to buying
food and choosing clothes. The idea

MEASURES
is always the same—to find out how
many units (such as inches or
pounds) there are in the thing you
want to measure, by using some
kind of measuring device.

Measuring up
Anything that can be expressed in
numbers can be measured, from the
age of the Universe to the mass of your
mom. Once you have measurements,
you can use them for lots of things,
such as building a car or explaining why
the Sun shines, and they can play a vital
part in forensics to help solve crimes.

Line of attack
Forensic scientists use all kinds
of measurements to get a picture of
the crime. The position of evidence
is noted and angles are measured to
work out the criminal’s actions, the
paths of moving objects, and whether
witnesses could have seen what they
claim from where they were standing.

Standard units
Every kind of measurement has at least one unit,
usually more. It’s vital that everyone knows exactly
what these are, so seven basic units, called
standard units, have been agreed on internationally
(see below). If units are confused, accidents can
happen. In 1999, a Mars probe crashed into the
planet because it was programmed in metric units,
such as meters and kilograms, but the controllers
sent instructions in inches and pounds.

Unit name (symbol) Measures


meter (m) Length
kilogram (kg) Mass
second (s) Time
ampere (A) Electric current
Matching prints
kelvin (K) Thermodynamic temperature Everyone has different fingerprints.
mole (mol) Amount of substance The police can measure the shapes
of the lines in a fingerprint found at
candela (cd) Luminous intensity a crime scene and see if they match
the measurements of the fingerprint
of a suspect.
42
The right angle
Under pressure Angles are usually measured in
The behavior of your body, such degrees, a unit invented in Ancient
as heart rate and blood pressure, Babylon (now Iraq). Stargazers
can also be measured. Lie wanted to describe the positions
detectors take measurements like of stars in the night sky, so they
this, but unusual activity may not divided a circle into 360 portions,
always be caused by lying, so each of which is one degree.
cannot be used as evidence. Today, we use degrees to measure
all kinds of angles.

Leave no trace
Wherever you go, you leave
traces of yourself behind—
a hair, sweat, a drop of blood,
or particles of soil from your
shoes. Forensic scientists
can measure and match the
chemicals in tiny samples of
trace evidence to link a
person to a crime.

Tiny units
1 micrometer = 10-6 m
1 nanometer = 10-9 m
1 picometer = 10-12 m
1 femtometer = 10-15 m
1 yoctometer = 10-24 m

This magnified ant has a


microchip 10-3 m (1 mm)
wide in its jaws.

Scientific notation
To measure very small or large things, we can
either use fractions of metric units, like those
above, or special units, like those below. To avoid
lots of zeros and save space, large or small
numbers are written in scientific notation, which
uses powers of 10. So two million is 2 x 106,
while one-millionth is 1 x 10-6.

Huge units
Astronomical unit = 1.5 x 1011 m
Light-year = 9.46 x 1015 m
Parsec = 3 x 1016 m
Kiloparsec = 3 x 1019 m
If the shoe fits... Megaparsec= 3 x 1022 m
Measuring footprints can reveal more
than the wearer’s shoe size. The
Our galaxy, the Milky Way,
person’s height, weight, and whether is 100,00 light-years, or
they were running or walking can be 1021 m, across.
determined too. The pattern of the sole
can be compared with suspect’s shoes.
43
BRAIN GAMES

HOW BIG?

HOW FAR?
In this high-tech world, full of gizmos and
gadgets, you rarely have to figure out Watch the shadow
Have you ever wondered how tall your house or a
anything for yourself anymore. But there’s favorite tree is? On a sunny day, it’s easy enough to find
something very satisfying about solving a out by using your shadow as a guide. The best time to do
this is just before the Sun is at an angle of 45° in the sky.
problem using your wits and a few simple
calculations. Here are some interesting tips You will need:
• A sunny day
and challenges to put your mind to. • A tape measure

Step 1 Step 2
On a sunny day, stand in a Stand on the mark for your
The Egyptians used
good spot next to the object feet and wait. Watch your
the hand to measure you want to measure, with shadow. When the Sun is at
small sizes
the Sun at your back. Lie on 45° your shadow will equal
the ground and mark your your height.
Digit—the height—the top of your head
breadth of
a finger and the bottom of your feet.

Span If you can’t wait until the Step 3


length of your shadow is the Rush over to the tall object
Palm same as your height, work out and measure its shadow,
the scale of the shadow in which will also be equal
Inch—from tip relation to your height—is it to its height.
to first joint of half your height, for example?
the thumb
Then you just need to double
the measurements.

Foot
The Romans
measured long Pace—the distance
distances using one foot travels from
paces and feet back to front, so
two steps

From hand to foot


Imagine you are washed up on an island with nothing but
the clothes on your back and some treasure. You want
to bury the treasure so you can explore the island and,
with luck, find help. The softest area of sand is some
distance from a lone palm tree—how can you measure
the distance to the spot so that you know where to find
it again? The solution is the world’s first measuring
instrument, the human body, which is how the Ancient
Egyptians and Romans did it. The flaw with this system,
of course, is that people come in all shapes and sizes,
so measurements are not going to be the same.

44
Time a storm
There’s a thunder storm on the horizon,
but how far away is it and is it coming or
going? Here’s how to find out.

Step 1 Step 2
Watch out for the lightning and Then take your total number of
listen for thunder. When you see seconds and divide it by five to get
a flash of lightning, start counting the distance in miles (by three to
the seconds until the thunder get the distance in kilometers).
rumbles. You can do this using So if you count 15 seconds, the
the second hand on your watch, storm is 3 miles (5 km) away.
but if you don’t have one, just
count the seconds.

To count seconds without a watch, use a


long word to help keep an accurate
rhythm. For example, “One Mississippi, two
Mississippi...” and so on. Other good words
are chimpanzee and elephant.
Measure the Earth
More than 2,000 years ago, the Ancient Greek
mathematician Eratosthenes measured the
size of the Earth and got it almost exactly
right. Here’s how he did it, but this time,
see if you can work out the answer.
Step 2
Then Eratosthenes
discovered that on
The Sun was midsummer’s day in
directly above
Step 1 the well Alexandria in the north
Eratosthenes came across a of Egypt, the Sun 7.2�
well in Syene in the south of strikes the ground at a
Egypt where a beam of light slight angle, casting a
shone right down into the shadow. Drawing a
well, and reflected back off triangle, he worked out
the water at the bottom, at that the angle of the
only one time each year—noon Sun’s rays was 7.2°.
on midsummer’s day. He
realized this meant the Sun
was directly overhead.
Alexandria
Syene Step 3
You know the Earth is round,
so imagine two lines, one
vertical, the other at an angle
of 7.2°, extending to the center
of the Earth. You know that a
circle has 360°, so divide 360
7.2� by 7.2 to find out what fraction
Beams of light shone
straight down the well this slice is of the whole Earth.
If the distance between Syene
and Alexandria is 500 miles
The water at the bottom (800 km), can you calculate the
of the well acted like a Earth’s circumference?
mirror, reflecting the
light back up

45
FACTS AND FIGURES

THE SIZE OF THE


PROBLEM There’s almost nothing you can’t measure,
from the everyday to the extreme. Here are
some scary scales—the Fujita, Torino, and
hobo—so you’ll know if you should run, duck,
or hold your nose!

Stand back!
Volcanic explosivity is measured
on a scale of 1 to 8 according to how
much material is spewed out, how high it
goes, and how long the eruption lasts. A Armageddon?
value of 0 is given to nonexplosive eruptions, Asteroids aren’t just in the
1 is gentle, then every increase of 1 on the movies—the Solar System is full of
scale indicates an explosion 10 times as powerful. them! Astronomers use the Torino
scale to measure the threat of one
0 : Effusive—Kilauea (continuing) hitting Earth and causing destruction.
1 : Gentle—Stromboli (continuing) A 0 means we’re all going to be OK, a 5 is a
2 : Explosive—Mount Sinabung 2010 slightly alarming close encounter, and a
3 : Severe—Soufrière Hills 1995 10 means we’re all doomed (unless
4 : Cataclysmic—Eyjafjallajőkull 2010 you’re in a movie)!
5 : Paroxysmal—Mount Vesuvius 79 ce
6 : Colossal—Krakatoa 1883
7 : Super-colossal—Thera c.1600 bce
8 : Mega-colossal—Yellowstone 640,000 years ago

Shhhhh!
Sound is tricky to measure. It can be
high or low in pitch (measured in
hertz) as well as loud or soft. Its
loudness is related to its power,
which is measured in decibels (dB).
Stubble scale The softest sound audible to humans
One beard-second is the is 0 dB, typical speech is 55–65 dB,
length a man’s beard grows in and a jet engine 100 ft (30 m) away is
one second: 5 nanometers 140 dB. Any sound more than 120 dB
(0.000005 mm). It’s such a can damage your hearing.
tiny measurement, it’s
only used by scientists.

46
Twister Big as a barn
The Fujita scale is used to rate the intensity of A barn sounds big, but in
tornadoes, based on wind speeds and how much physics one barn is the
damage they cause. An F-0 might damage the size of the nucleus of a
chimney, an F-3 will take the roof off, and an F-5 will uranium atom, which is
blow your house away! very, very small!
F-
0:
40 –
72 m
ph (64
–116 km/h)—Light damage
F-1
:7 3–112 am a ge
F-2 mp h (117–180 km/h)—Moderate d Watch out!
: 113–
157 m If you’re out and about in
ph
(181–253 m ag e
km/h)—Significant da snowy mountain regions,
F-3 you need to know about the
: 158–
206 mph a ge
(254–332 km/h)—Severe dam avalanche danger scale. This
F-4 : 2 age uses color-coded signs, and
ng dam ama
ge
ph (333–418 km/h)—Devastati
07–260 m
le d works like traffic signals. Green
ib
cred
51 2 k m/h)—In means good to go and low risk.
F-5 : 261–318 mph (419– Yellow and orange mean medium
risk, so take care. Red and black
mean stay at home or you’ll cause
an avalanche yourself!

Mouthful
Hot, hot, hot! The official amount of food
The spicy heat of chili peppers in a mouthful is 1 oz (28 ml).
is measured on the Scoville But who would want a carefully
scale, which ranges from measured mouthful of food?
0 (mild) to 1 million
(explosive). Beware!
Pee-ew!
0 : Bell pepper You can even measure
2,500 : Jalapeño how bad something
30,000 : Cayenne pepper smells using
200,000 : Habanero pepper the hobo scale, which
1,000,000 : Naga Jolokia runs from 0 to 100.

0 : No smell
Horsepower 13 : An average fart
Horsepower is the unit used to 50 : So bad it will
measure the power or output make you vomit
of engines or motors. The 100 : Lethal
scale dates from a time when
people wanted to compare the
power of the newly invented
steam engine with that of
horses. The idea stuck and
we still rate cars and trucks
in “horsepower” today.

47
Magi
c
numbers
SEEING
SEQUENCES
Math is the search for patterns—patterns of numbers,
of shapes, of anything. Wherever there’s any kind of
pattern, there is usually something interesting going
on, such as a meaning or a structure. A number What comes next?
Figuring out the pattern of a
sequence obeys a rule or pattern—the fun is in sequence is useful because you can
figuring out the pattern. then see what’s going to come next.
For example, Thomas Malthus, a
19th-century economist, decided that
the amount of food grown on Earth
increased over time in an arithmetic
Types of sequences sequence. Population, however,
There are two main types of sequence: increases geometrically. Malthus
decided this meant that food supply
arithmetic and geometric. In an
arithmetic sequence, the gap between
5‚ 10‚ 15‚ 20 could not keep up with population, so
each number (called a “term”) is the In an arithmetic sequence, the if things continued this way, one day
same, so the sequence 1, 2, 3, 4... is
numbers increase by jumps we would run out of food.
that are the same size.
arithmetic (there is a gap of 1 between
each term). A geometric sequence is
one where there the terms increase or
decrease by a fixed ratio, for example
1‚ 2‚ 4‚ 8‚ 16 Population
In a geometric sequence, the
1, 2, 4, 8, 16... (the number double numbers increase by jumps
each time), is a geometric sequence. that change size.
Point of crisis

Food supply

TY
ACTIVI
Time
What’s the pattern?
Can you see the pattern in the sequences below and
figure out what the next term will be for each one?

A 1, 100, 10,000… E 11, 9, 12, 8, 13, 7… In 1965, a computer


B 3, 7, 11, 15, 19… F 1, 2, 4, 7, 11, 16… company expert,
C 64, 32, 16… G 1, 3, 6, 10, 15… Gordon E. Moore, predicted
D 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36… H 2, 6, 12, 20, 30…
that the power of computers
would double every two
years. He was right!

50
Each number in the
sequence is the sum of
the two previous ones.

1‚ 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 5‚ 8‚ 13, 21, 34, 55...


Fibonacci sequence Many flowers
One of the best-known number patterns is have numbers
of petals from
the Fibonacci sequence, named after the the Fibonacci
Italian mathematician who found it. Each sequence.
number in the sequence is the sum of the
two previous numbers. This pattern is found
everywhere in nature, and particularly plants, in
the number of petals on flowers, the arrangement

φ
of seeds, and the branching of trees. There are There are 13
8 clockwise counterclockwise
spirals. spirals.
1 1 2
2 13
3
The symbol for phi 8 12
4
3
11
The golden ratio 5
The Fibonacci sequence is also
10
linked to another mysterious 7 4 6
number—approximately 1.618034—known as phi, 9
5 7
or the golden ratio. A ratio is a relationship between 6 8
two numbers. A ratio of 2:1 means the first number
is twice as big as the second one. If you divide any Fibonacci spiral
number in the Fibonacci sequence by the one before If you look closely at the florets and seeds in some
it, you get a number close to phi. Some artists, flower heads, such as sunflowers, or the design of a
including Leonardo da Vinci, believed phi had pine cone, you can see two sets of spirals, turning in
magical qualities and designed their paintings opposite directions. The number of spirals is a
based on the proportions of the golden ratio. Fibonacci number, as shown above.

TY
ACTIVI

Beautiful math You will need:


Try your hand at some mathematical art. First draw • Paper • Ruler
a golden rectangle from a sequence of squares • Pencils • Compass
and then use it to make a golden spiral.

Step 1 Step 3
Draw a small square and mark a cross Using the new rectangle’s longest
on the point halfway along the bottom. side as a guide, draw a square
Place the point of a compass on the below it as shown at left. Using
cross, with the pencil end on one of the compass, draw a curve
the top corners, and draw a wide curve between the corners.
as shown left.

Step 4
Step 2 Continue drawing larger
Use a ruler to extend the square to and larger squares and
the point where it meets the curve, drawing in the curves
and draw in the other lines, as and you will soon have
shown, to complete the rectangle. a golden spiral.

51
Probability
The likelihood something
Step 1
cal ntist,
e Pas as a scie will happen is called
There are six possible
Blais cal (1623–62) w . He was
as ian outcomes (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or
Blaise P nd mathematic sult of his probability (see pages
5 heads), so look at the
invento
r, a , as a re t). His 100–101). Here’s how
r e li g io us man e righ Pascal used the triangle
sixth row of the triangle:
also a p ro b a bility (se xists, being 1, 5, 10, 10, 5, 1.
in e to work out the probability
interest at if God going
a s o n in g was th ou a chance of that, when tossing five
re e y t, it
s will giv od doesn’t exis coins, all of them will
Step 2
religiou G
n. And if ou belie
ve. Match the alternatives for
to heave tte r what y
land heads up.
each outcome to numbers
m a
doesn’t in the triangle’s sixth line:

0 heads = 1
1 head = 5
2 heads = 10
3 heads = 10
4 heads = 5
Triangular treasury 5 heads = 1
Pascal’s triangle is easy to construct.
You just make each number the sum Step 3
of the two numbers above. It’s no
wonder the resulting pyramid is 1 Now add the row of
numbers:
so popular with mathematicians. It 1 + 5 + 10 + 10 + 5 + 1 = 32
contains so many of their favorite
number patterns, including triangular
and square numbers, powers, Step 4
and even the Fibonacci sequence. 1 1 To find the probability of
all five coins being heads,
take the number next to 5
heads, which is 1, and
compare it to the total of

1 2 1 32. This tells you that the


probability of five heads is
1 in 32—if you toss the
coins 32 times, they will
probably all be heads just
once.
1 3 3 1
Each number is
the sum of the
two above—6 is
1 plus 5.

1 4 6 4 1
You can add as
many rows as
you like—can
you work out 1 5 10 10 5 1
the numbers in
each row?

1 6 15 20 15 6 1

52
TY

PASCAL’S
ACTIVI

Braille
challenge
Braille is a system of
raised dots that blind

TRIANGLE
people can “read” by
running their fingers over
them. Each letter is a
different arrangement of
six points, in three rows
Centuries ago, Indian and Chinese In a way, computers of two. A point can either
mathematicians discovered the strange be raised up so that it

properties of a triangular stack of numbers.


started with Pascal, can be felt, or left flat.
The first three letters
In the 1600s, the French mathematician who built the first are shown below. The
big dots represent raised
Blaise Pascal used the triangle to study well-known points and the small
the laws of probability. From then on, it mechanical calculating ones represent flat
points. Can you work
was called Pascal’s triangle.
machine in 1645. out how many possible
combinations of this
pattern there are?

A B C
Looking for patterns
Pascal’s triangle is full of fascinating number
patterns. Here are just a few of them.
1s
1 Powers of two 1
The totals of all
Counting the rows are
1 1 numbers powers of 2. 1 1 1x2=2

Triangular Step 1
1 2 1 numbers 1 2 1 2x2=4
As in the example above,
work out how many
1 3 3 1 1 3 3 1 2x4=8
arrangements there are
for each number of dots
1 4 6 4 1 1 4 6 4 1 2 x 8 = 16
from 0 to 6. For example,
with 0 dots there is one
1 5 10 10 5 1 1 5 10 10 5 1 2 x 16 = 32
arrangement, with 1 dot,
2 x 32 = 64 there are six possible
1 6 15 20 15 6 1 1 6 15 20 15 6 1 places the dot could go.
Can you spot this pattern
in Pascal’s triangle?
Fibonacci numbers Hockey stick sums
Adding up the Starting from the
shallow diagonals,
1
1s at the edge, Step 2
shown here in follow a diagonal
different colors, of numbers. Stop Add the numbers of
reveals the 1 anywhere inside
1
2 combinations together.
Fibonacci the triangle, turn
sequence. down in the What is your total?
1 1 3 opposite 1 1
direction in a
“hockey stick”
1 2 1 5 pattern and 1 2 1 Step 3
you’ll get Now work out the number
their sum.
1 3 3 1 8 1 3 3 1 of outcomes for a four-
point pattern. Which row
13 of the triangle can help
1 4 6 4 1 1 4 6 4 1
you this time?
1 5 10 10 5 1 1 5 10 10 5 1

1 6 15 20 15 6 1 1 6 15 20 15 6 1

53
BRAIN GAMES

MAGIC
One day, more than 4,000 years ago,
Emperor Yu of China found a turtle in
the Yellow River. Its shell was made up

SQUARES
of nine squares, each with a number
from 1 to 9 written on it. Stranger still,
the sum of any row, column, or diagonal
in this 3 x 3 square was 15. It was the
world’s first magic square.

16 3 2 13
5 10 11 8
9 6 7 12 Sensational sums
True or not, Emperor Yu’s story introduced the world
to the amazing properties of magic squares. In the
4 15 14 1 square on the left, add up the numbers in each row
or each column. Now try adding those running
diagonally from corner to corner, or those just
in the corners, or the four in the center.
Have you found the magic number?

Making magic
Can you complete these magic
squares? Use each number 18 23
only once. The magic number
is given below each square.
7 9
25 27 22 31

11 16 34 9 1 10 21
7
6 30 28 16
9 6
14 29 8 20

4 13 8 1 15 35 17 13
Easy (number range: 1–9) Medium (number range: 1–16) Hard (number range: 1–36)
Magic number: 15 Magic number: 34 Magic number: 111

54
Adaptable square A knight’s tour
In this magic square, the numbers in the rows, In the game of chess, a knight can move only in an
columns, and diagonals add up to the magic L shape, as shown below for the moves from 1 to 2 to 3.
number of 22. However, you can reset the magic Follow the full knight’s tour around this magic square,
number by simply adding to or taking away from visiting each position just once. On an 8 x 8 square, there
the numbers in the white boxes. Try adding 1 to are 26,534,728,821,064 possible tours that take the knight
each white box number, for example—the magic back to the square on which he began. So take an empty
number will become 23. grid and find some more routes yourself.

1 48 31 50 33 16 63 18

8 11 2 1 30 51 46 3 62 19 14 35

47 2 49 32 15 34 17 64

1 2 7 12 52 29 4 45 20 61 36 13

5 44 25 56 9 40 21
3 4 9
60
6 28 53 8 41 24 57 12 37

10 5 4 3 43 6 55 26 39 10 59 22

54 27 42 7 58 23 38 11

Move up two and cross over


Your own magic square to the bottom right.
Make a magic square using knight’s-tour moves. Place a
1 anywhere in the bottom row, then move like a knight, in
an L, through the other squares to place the numbers 2, 3, 4,
and so on, following these rules:
3
• Move two squares up and one to the right if you can.
• If the square you reach is already full, write your number
5
on the square directly beneath the last number instead.
• Imagine the square wraps around so the top meets the
bottom and the two sides meet—if you move off one edge
6 2
of the square, re-enter on the other side.
4
So, on this example, from the 3 you move up and right to the
second bottom-left square to place a 4. After placing the 5, the
L move takes you to the square already occupied by 1, so place
the 6 directly below 5 instead. Continue in this way to fill the grid.
1
This move has come
from the 3, top right. This move is 5, but since the square is
occupied, the 6 must go beneath the 5.

55
BRAIN GAMES

MISSING
Number games such as Sudoku,
Sujiko, and Kakuro are great for
exercising the brain. These puzzles

NUMBERS
are all about logical thinking and
some arithmetic. To find the numbers
you’re looking for, you need to use
your powers of deduction.

Completed grid Column


Sudoku
This puzzle consists of a 9 x 9 grid. The
numbers 1–9 appear only once in each 2 5 7 4 8 1 9 6 3
subgrid, vertical column, and horizontal row.
1 9 3 6 2 7 5 4 8
Using the numbers already in the grid, you
need to figure out which number should fill 8 4 6 5 3 9 1 7 2
an empty box. Each box you fill gives an
additional clue to solving the puzzle.
3 6 1 7 5 8 2 9 4
9 8 5 1 4 2 7 3 6
Row
A good place to look first 7 2 4 9 6 3 8 5 1
is the row, column, or subgrid
with the most numbers filled in. 6 3 2 8 7 5 4 1 9
Check the remaining numbers to
find a good starting point. 4 7 9 2 1 6 3 8 5
Starter 5 1 8 3 9 4 6 2 7
1 6 4 8 3 Subgrid

Never just guess where a number goes. If


8 2 3 6 there are a number of possibilities, write them
small in pencil in the corner until you’re sure.
2 9 7
Slightly harder
2 8 7
7 5 3 1 2
1 3 7
9 6 5 1
7 9 2 4 8
2 4
9 4 6 1 2
9 2
7 3 5
8 9 5 3
6 8 7 5 9 3
7 3
Look for sets of three numbers, or “triplets.”
The number 7 appears in the bottom and middle 6 2
subgrids of the middle block above, which means
that the third 7 must go in the left-hand column of 1 2 6 5
the top box. Check the rows and you’ll see there’s
only one place it can go. 3 2 4 9 8

56
Sujiko Over to you…
In a Sujiko puzzle, the number in each Look at the number
circle is the sum of the numbers in the 14 in the bottom left

7
four surrounding squares. Using the circle. To reach a total
numbers 1-9 only once, work out the
arrangement of numbers needed to fill
of 14, the sum of the
in the blank squares. empty squares must
21 18 also total 7, so which
Here’s how
4 + 2 + 7 + 1 = 14 other combinations
2 are there?

4 2 6
14 15
14 18

7 1 9 5
16 21
You must do this using the numbers
5 3 8 1–9 only once. We’ve completed one here
to show you how it works. Now try to fill
in the grid above yourself.
1 + 9 + 3 + 8 = 21

Kakuro
A Kakuro puzzle is a little like a crossword Now try this
puzzle, except with numbers. Fill in the
blank squares with the numbers 1–9. They
can appear more than once. The numbers
must add up to the total shown either 17 20 3 8
above the column or to the side of the row. 16 4

The numbers in this


column add up to 17 22
What to do 13 15
5 5
12
21 17 21
4
15
8
7 8 9
1
15 7 16 10
6 9 17 3
3 9
5
13 12
2 3
6
1 5 The numbers in this
row add up to 15

57
Karl

Gauss Many people consider Gauss to be the greatest


mathematician ever. He made breakthroughs in many
areas of math, including statistics, algebra, and
number theory, and he used his skills to make many
discoveries in physics. Gauss was also exceptionally
good at mental arithmetic, even at a young age.
swick,
Gauss was born in this house in Brun so his
Germany. His parents were very poor,
of Brunswick.
education was paid for by the Duke

Early life Proving the impossible


Gauss was born in 1777, the only child Gauss was gifted at both math and
of poor, uneducated parents. From an languages, and when he was 19, he had
early age, it was clear that Gauss was to decide which to study. He settled on
a child prodigy with an extraordinary math after completing the supposedly
talent for mathematics. When he impossible mathematical task of
was just three years old, he spotted drawing a regular 17-sided shape
a mistake in his father’s accounts. (a heptadecagon) using only a ruler
Later, Gauss amazed his teacher at and a compass. His discovery led
school by coming up with his own to a new branch of math.
way to add a long series of numbers.
A page of Gauss’s mathematical
notes from a letter he wrote in
July 1800 to Johann Hellwig, math
professor at Brunswick’s military
academy.

Sun

Ceres
Gauss wanted his
greatest discovery, the The lost planet
In 1801, the dwarf planet
17-sided heptadecagon, Ceres was discovered, but
astronomers lost track of it
carved on his tombstone, after it passed behind the Sun.
Gauss used his math skills to
but the stonemason locate Ceres. From the few
refused, telling him it observations that had been
made before it disappeared,
would look just Gauss was able to predict
where it would appear next.
like a circle. He was right!

Mars Jupiter

58
Science from math
Gauss was fascinated by math and also by its
practical uses in science. This led him to play a
part in inventing the electric telegraph—a major
means of communication in the days before
telephones and radios. Gauss also studied
Earth’s magnetism and invented a device
for measuring magnetic fields.
In recognition of this, a unit of
magnetism is named after him.

Many of the moon’s craters are named after famous


scientists. The Gauss crater sits on the northeastern
edge of the moon’s near side.

Correspondence
with Sophie Germain
Gauss often communicated with French
mathematician Sophie Germain about
topics such as number theory. Unable
to study or teach at the college level
because she was a woman, Germain
initially used a male pseudonym to
write to Gauss and other esteemed
mathematicians. Gauss campaigned for
her to be awarded an honorary degree
in recognition of her achievements,
Cool curve but the French Academy refused.
This axis marks how
When a set of information, such as the many people are a The top of the
particular height “bell” indicates
heights of a group of people, is plotted on the average height
a bar graph (see page 102), it commonly
takes the shape of a particular curve. At
either end of the graph are the shortest
and tallest people, with most people in
the middle. Gauss was the first to identify
this curve, calling it a bell curve. It can be
used to analyze data, design experiments,
work out errors, and
make predictions.

This German 10-euro note


featured a portrait of Gauss
and a bell curve. All sorts of thing
including this Ges have been named in Gauss’s
in 1901. During rman ship sent to explore Antarhonor,
extinct volcano, the expedition, the crew discove ctica
which they name red an
d Gaussberg.

59
INFINITY
Almost everyone finds it difficult to grasp the meaning of infinity.
It’s like an endless corridor that goes on forever without any end The infinity symbol was
or limits. But infinity is a useful idea in mathematics. Many invented in 1655. It
sequences and series go on to infinity and so do the numbers refers to something that
you count with. It’s like saying that there’s no largest
number, because whatever number you think
has no beginning or end.
of, you can always add another.

Is infinity real?
Just because infinity is useful in math, it
doesn’t mean that infinite things definitely exist.
For example, it is possible that the Universe
is infinite and contains an infinite number of
stars. Time, too, will probably go on without
ever ending. This is called eternity.

Properties of infinity
Anything is possible Although infinity is not really a number, it can be
Given a long enough time, anything can happen. thought of as the limit, or end, of a series of numbers.
Therefore, it can be used in equations:
For example, a roomful of monkeys tapping on
= ∞
keyboards would eventually type out the complete
∞+1 = ∞ ∞
∞+ ∞x∞=∞
works of Shakespeare. This is because the works
of Shakespeare are finite (have an end), and given
infinite time, eventually all possible finite
sequences of letters will appear. ∞ - 1,000,000,000 = ∞
Try exploring the math of infinity on a calculator.
Divide 1 by larger and larger numbers and see what
happens. What do you think you would get if you could
divide by an infinitely large number?
60
Exploring infinity
It is not just mathematicians that have explored
the idea of infinity, but philosophers, writers, and
artists, too. Dutch artist M.C. Escher (1898–1972)
is one of several creators who have used the idea
of infinity, often including interlocking repeated
images in his graphics. There is even a variation of
Infinite math chess called infinite chess, in which the chessboard
The infinity symbol looks like an 8 on its side. can go on endlessly!
However, the infinity symbol isn't used to represent
the idea of infinity in sequences. Instead, infinite
sequences of numbers are written with three dots at
the end. For example,the numbers you count with are
1, 2, 3, … Other sequences might have no beginning
and no end. For example: …-2, -1, 0, 1, 2, …

Endless space
Most people don’t like the idea that the
Universe might be infinite and go on
forever, and that there is no farthest star.
If that were the case, then there would
be an infinite number of Earths and
an infinite number of “you's” too.
It's difficult to imagine, but
this idea goes some way
toward explaining why
some scientists assume
that the Universe must
have an outer limit.

Going on forever
Infinity is impossible to fully
understand or imagine. You can get a
sense of it, though, by standing between
two mirrors. Since each mirror reflects the
other mirror, you'll get to see images of
yourself stretching endlessly away!

Georg Cantor
The first person to grapple with the math
of infinity was Georg Cantor (1845–1918),
who believed in different kinds of infinity.
Mathematicians hated his ideas, which
upset traditional ways of thinking, and
he faced great hostility. Today, his
theories are accepted and have
changed math forever.

61
FACTS AND FIGURES

NUMBERS WITH

MEANING
14 17
42
All over the world, people have lucky,

17
and sometimes unlucky, numbers.
But why is this? The reasons range

4
from religious significance to the

14
sound or look of the number.

7
In Italy, the number 17 is very unlucky.
Italian planes often don’t have a row

42
17 because superstitious airlines leave
it out. The reason is that it’s written XVII
in Roman numerals. This may look
harmless, but jumble up the letters
and you get VIXI, which means
In China, the number to avoid is “my life is over!”
14 because it sounds like “want to
die.” In South America, however,
Do not shout out the number 14 is considered very lucky
42 in Japan! When the numbers because it’s twice the lucky number

4
four and two are pronounced 7... so you can double your luck.

5
together in Japanese, they sound

666
like “going to death.”

7
Seven is generally considered a lucky or
even magic number. In Irish folklore, a
seventh son of a seventh son is supposed
In China, Japan, and Korea, the word for four
sounds like “death.” In Hong Kong (China),
some tall buildings leave out floor numbers
with four in them, such as floors 4, 14, 24,
34, and 40. So a building with a 50th floor
at the top does not always have 50 floors!

to have magic powers. Iranian cats


supposedly have seven, not nine, lives.

5 666
And in the Jewish and Christian faiths,
the number seven symbolizes perfection.

This number is very unlucky in Christian


In the Islamic faith, five is a sacred culture because it is recorded in the Bible
number. There are five major parts to the as the number of the beast, or the devil. In
faith, called the Pillars of Islam. Followers China, however, the word for six sounds
of Islam pray five times a day, and there like “smooth” or “flowing,” so saying six
are five types of Islamic law and five three times in a row is like saying
law-giving prophets. “everything is running smoothly.”
888
888 33
60
Counting on numbers
It’s easy to understand why a number
that sounds like “going to death”
makes people feel uneasy, but why do
we give other numbers meanings?
It’s probably because a long time ago, In China, the number eight symbolizes
before we understood science, people prosperity and wealth, so three eights
in a row means that success and money If you want to impress
felt a need to understand and explain
are tripled! License plates, houses, and someone in Russia, do
why bad or good things happened to
telephone numbers that feature this everything three times.
them. If there was no other likely
super-lucky number sell for vast amounts. The number is considered very
explanation, people looked for a
lucky because it represents the

42 18
pattern in the numbers and blamed
Holy Christian Trinity—God the
that for their problems, such as
Father, the Son, and the Holy
disease or a spell of bad weather.
Spirit. So remember to kiss
Similarly, having “lucky” numbers

60
people three times when you
gave people some hope that
meet, and bring three flowers
things might get better!
for someone really special.

The Ancient Babylonians loved


60 and used it as a base for all their
mathematical calculations. We don’t
count like them anymore, but some
elements of their number system

40
survive, such as the 60 minutes in
an hour and 60 seconds in a minute.

In Russia, a quick way to be forgiven for your


sins is to kill a spider! One dead spider wipes
out 40 sins. The number 40 also occurs

13
frequently in Christianity and often refers
to periods of reflection or punishment. The
prophet Moses spent 40 days and 40 nights
on Mount Sinai and Jesus fasted in the
wilderness for 40 days.

Some people prefer to stay inside on Friday


the 13th, because 13 is such an unlucky
number. For Christians, it is linked to the
13th apostle, Judas, who betrayed Jesus.
However, it’s not all bad. Jews and Sikhs
think 13 is a very lucky number.
63
BRAIN GAMES

NUMBER
TRICKS Numbers can be made to do magic tricks if you
know the right moves. Put on a show with these
mind-boggling calculations and your friends will be
convinced you’re either a magician or a genius.

Guess a birthday Pocket change


Let the math do all the work for you with this Convince a friend of your extraordinary mathematical
trick to reveal a friend’s date of birth. powers by correctly guessing the amount of change
he has in his pockets.
Step 1
Hand your friend a calculator and Step 1
ask her to do the following: Find a friend with some loose change in his
• Add 18 to her birth month pockets. Ask him to add up the coins, but you
• Multiply the answer by 25 don’t want a total of more than $1. If he’s got
• Subtract 333 too much, ask him to remove some coins.
• Multiply the answer by 8 Then ask him to do the following:
• Subtract 554 • Take his age and multiply it by 2
• Divide the answer by 2 • Add 5
• Add her birth date day • Multiply this sum by 50
• Multiply the answer by 5 • Subtract 365
• Add 692 • Add the amount of the loose
• Multiply the answer by 20 change from his pockets
• Add only the last two digits • Add 115 to get the final answer
of her birth year
Step 2
Step 2 Amaze your friend by revealing that
Build up suspense and then ask her the first two digits of the number are
to subtract 32940. The answer will be his age, and the last two digits
her birthday! are the amount of change from
his pocket.

64
6 1 7 4 This curious number pattern
Kaprekar’s Constant
Tell a friend that, by following one simple magic formula, you can was discovered by the

1
turn any four-digit number into 6174 in seven steps or fewer.
Indian mathematician
Step 1
D.R. Kaprekar.
7 Get your friend to write down any four-digit number that has at
least two different numbers, so 1744 is fine, but 5555 is not.

Step 2
Tell her to put the digits in ascending and descending order. So,
1744 would give 1447 and 7441. Instruct her to subtract the
small number from the large number. If the answer isn’t 6174,

4 repeat the last two steps using the answer of the first
calculation. Within seven tries, she will end up with 6174. 6

1 6 7
Predicting the answer
This trick reveals your ability to predict the right answer.
In fact, you are just disguising some simple math. Find somebody’s age
You can also use a series of calculations to
reveal the age of someone older than nine.
Step 1
Before you begin this trick, take the current year and Step 1
double it—for example, 2012 x 2 = 4024. Write the answer Make sure your victim doesn’t mind you
on a piece of paper and fold it to hide the number. revealing his age, then give him a piece
of paper and ask him to do the following:
Step 2 • Multiply the first number of his age
Find a volunteer, hand him the folded piece of paper, and by 5, then add 3.
ask him to do the following: • Double this figure, and add the second
• Think of a significant historical date, and add his age digit of his age.
to it—for example, 1969 + 13 = 1982.
• Next, add the year of his birth to the number of years Step 2
that have passed since that historical date—for example, Get him to write the total down and show
1999 + 43 = 2042. it to you. Pretend to be doing complex
• Combine the two answers, so 1982 + 2042 = 4024. calculations, but simply subtract 6 and you
should have his age.
Step 3
Ask your friend to open the piece of paper
and enjoy the amazed look on his face.

65
PUZZLING PRIMES
Of all of the numbers that exist, primes are
the ones that mathematicians love most. The search continues
There is no known method for
That’s because prime numbers have special discovering primes. Each new one
properties. A prime is a number that can be is more difficult to find than the last.
It’s not often that math makes the
divided into whole numbers only by itself and headlines, but when a new prime
the number 1. So 4 is not a prime, because number is found, it’s big news. In 1991,
the tiny country of Liechtenstein even
it can be divided by 2. However, 3 is a prime issued a stamp to mark the discovery
because no numbers can be divided into of a new prime number.
it except for itself and 1.
31
331
3331
TY
ACTIVI Prime pyramid 33331
imes All of the numbers in this number

ting for pr be found only by ek pyramid are primes. The next number in 333331
Sif ca n e Gre the pattern would be 333,333,331, but 3333331
numbers
ime 00 bce, th bout 3
surprisingly it isn’t a prime—it can be
Large pr ever, in a red how
to divided by 17 to give 19,607,843. 33333331
o m p u te rs . H o w
sth e n e s discove tem.
c rato sys
atician E sing this “sieve”
mathem n e s b y u
ll o
find sma

Draw a 10 x 10 grid and fill it with the


numbers 1 to 100. Cross out the number 1,
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
which is not classified as a prime number.
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
The next number is 2. There is no number
except 1 that can divide into it, so it is a prime.
Circle it. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

Any number that can be produced by


multiplying by 2 cannot be a prime. So, except
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
for the number 2 itself, cross out all the
multiples of 2. 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
The next number is 3. There is no number
except 1 that can divide into it, so it’s a prime. 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Circle it. Again, any number that can be produced
by multiplying by 3 cannot be a prime, so cross
out all the numbers that are multiples of 3, 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
except for the number 3 itself.

You should have already crossed out all 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80


the multiples of 4 when you crossed out the
multiples of 2. Now cross out all multiples of 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90
5 and 7 (again, except for themselves).

All of the remaining numbers are primes. 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100

66
TY
ACTIVI
Crafty cicadas
Find the factors Prime numbers are even used in nature, in
Prime numbers are the building blocks from which other numbers particular by an insect called a cicada. Some
can be made. For instance, 6 can be made by multiplying 2 and 3, so species of cicadas live underground as
2 and 3 are called the “prime factors” of 6. Can you find the answers larvae for 13 or 17 years, after which time
to these prime factor puzzles? they emerge as adults to mate. Both 13 and
17 are prime numbers, which means the
Step 1 cicadas are more likely to avoid predators
There is a number between 30 and 40 with prime factors between with life cycles of two, three, four, or five
4 and 10. What is the number and its prime factors? To answer this, years, and therefore stand a better chance of
start by finding the prime numbers between 4 and 10. Now multiply living to see another day.
these numbers together to find their products (the answer when two
numbers are multiplied together). You’ll find there is only one
product between 30 and 40.

Step 2
Now find a number between 40 and 60 that has prime factors
between 4 and 12. What are its factors?

TY
ACTIVI

Prime cube
Write the numbers 1–9 into the squares of a
3 x 3 grid so that each row and column adds up
to a prime number. It does not have to be the same
prime number each time. We have given you some
numbers to start you off, but there are 16 different
solutions. How many can you find?

In 2009, an international
Prime busting
Multiplying two big prime numbers together is relatively computer project called the
easy with the help of a good computer. The result is called
a semiprime. But start with a semiprime and try to work
Great Internet Mersenne Prime
backward to find its prime factors, and you’re in trouble! It’s
an almost impossible task. For this reason, primes are used
Search (GIMPS) won a
to change messages into nearly unbreakable codes—a $100,000 prize for finding
process called encryption—to protect banking details and
the privacy of e-mails. a 12-million-digit
prime number.

67
Shapes and

space
Mathematicians love triangles, but they’re not

S
the only ones. These three-sided shapes are
a favorite with surveyors, gardeners, and

LE
physicists, too! And engineers and builders
love triangles because they are the simplest
and strongest shape that can be made
with straight beams.
NG
IA

Equilateral
triangle
TR

Isosceles
triangle

Scalene
triangle

The right angle


The most important angle used
for building is the right angle.
Builders use it to make sure
that walls are vertical.

Right triangle

Equilateral triangle
If all three sides are the
s same length and each
triangle
Types ofe in four main types,
angle is 60˚, a triangle
is equilateral. Scalene triangle
m If all the sides and
Triangles co angles. d
their sides an
angles are different,
depending on they all have in the triangle is scalene.
g that
The one thin the angles
is that if you add up 0�.
com m on is always 18
er, the result
at each corn Isosceles triangle Right triangle
If two sides and angles A triangle with one
are the same, the angle of 90˚ is called a
triangle is isosceles. right triangle

70
The 3-D graphics used in
Super-strong!
films and computer games If you make a square from four rods, it can easily
be forced into a diamond shape. The same is true of
are created using triangles. pentagons and hexagons—they are easily pushed or
pulled out of shape. A triangle of rods, on the other hand,
cannot be forced into a different shape without breaking
the rods or the joints. This strength is one reason why
you’ll find triangles used in buildings and bridges.

TY
ACTIVI

Measuring areas
You can use triangles to measure the area of any
shape that has straight lines. Here’s how to do it:

Trees and triangles Step 1


You can use a right-angled triangle to figure out the Split the area of 3
height of a tree without climbing it. Work out where this shape into 7 5
you need to place a stick on the ground that would point 4
right triangles. 8
directly at the top of the tree at an angle of 45˚. The We have marked 4
distance along the ground between the stick and the the dimensions you
tree will then be the same as the height of the tree. If need to know.
the angle between the stick and the ground is greater
than 45˚, then the tree would squash you if it fell. Step 2
A right triangle is
simply half a rectangle.
So work out the area of
Hipparc each shape as a rectangle,
The
hus
Ancient Gre 3 then halve it. So:
mathemati ek astrono
cian Hippa mer and 3 x 7 = 21
used triang rchus (c. 1
les to help 90–120 bce 21 ÷ 2 = 10.5
the measu him figure ) 7
rements of out
He didn’t st many object
ick to just e s. Step 3
objects, th arthly
ough—he u Repeat this process for the
to work ou sed triangle
t the distan s other triangles, and add them
of the Sun ce and size
and the Mo together to get the total area.
on!

71
SHAPING UP
The study of shapes is one of the most ancient
areas of math. The Ancient Egyptians learned
enough about them to build pyramids, measure
More and more sides
land, and study the stars. But it was the Ancient Shapes with five or more sides and angles all have
Greeks who really came to grips with shapes names ending in “-gon.” The first part of the name
comes from the Greek word for the number of
and discovered many of the ideas and rules that sides. Polygon means “many sides.”
we learn about today.

All four sides


Any shape with four straight sides is called a quadrilateral, and
there are connections between them. For example, a square is
a type of rectangle, and a rectangle is a type of parallelogram.
Pentagon Hexagon
5 sides 6 sides

Trapezium
A quadrilateral with
one pair of parallel
sides of different lengths.
Square
When all sides are equal Heptagon Octagon
and all corners are right 7 sides 8 sides
angles, it’s a square.

Rectangle Nonagon
A shape with four right angles
and two pairs of opposite 9 sides Decagon
sides of equal length. 10 sides
Kite
This shape has two pairs of
adjacent sides of equal length.
Opposite sides are not equal.

Even more sides


Dodecagon
The more sides a polygon has,
12 sides the closer it becomes to a circle.
Rhombus Parallelogram
If all sides are equal, but A shape that has opposite sides 13—tridecagon
there are no right angles
it’s a rhombus.
equal in length and parallel to 14—tetradecagon
each other.
15—pentadecagon
16—hexadecagon
17—heptadecagon
The math of shapes 18—octadecagon
is called geometry, from 19—enneadecagon
20—icosagon
the Ancient Greek words 100—hectogon
1000—chiliagon
for “Earth measuring.” 10,000—myriagon
1,000,000—megagon

72
Seeing symmetry
Many shapes have a quality called symmetry. There are two
types—lateral and rotational. If a shape can be folded so that
both halves are identical, it has lateral symmetry. If a shape
looks the same when you turn it part-way around a central
point, it has rotational symmetry. This shapely quality is
important in both math and science.
Snowflakes are made
of hexagon-shaped
Lateral line Turning point crystals, which is why
The line down the middle of a If you turn the book upside down, they all have six arms.
symmetrical shape is called the you’ll see that this swirl has rotational
axis of symmetry. A butterfly symmetry, because it looks exactly
has one axis of symmetry. the same the other way up.

Animals with an odd


number of limbs are rare,
but a starfish has five. As
a result, it has five axes of
lateral symmetry, as well
as rotational symmetry.

The perfect pattern of


spider webs is the
most efficient way to
build a large trap as
quickly as possible.

Shapes in nature
Regular shapes and symmetry can
be found in the natural world. Most
animals have an axis of symmetry,
and most plants have rotational
symmetry. These shapes are
partly due to the way living
things grow, but can also be Tiny sea creatures,
called diatoms, are
useful for the way they live. found in a wide variety
of shapes, with either
rotational or lateral
symmetry.
Bees build honeycombs
using hexagonal cells
because this shape
uses the least wax.

Symmetrical you
Humans look symmetrical—it’s a
sensible way to organize the parts
Flatfish are born of our bodies. But are we?
symmetrical, but as The features of your face are
they develop both slightly different on each side. Hold
a mirror along your nose and look into
eyes move over to the another mirror and you will see.
Inside your body, the heart is more on
same side of their head and the left and the liver is more on the right.
Most people have one foot that’s
they become asymmetrical. a little bigger than the other, and
one dominant hand.
If you tried to walk in a
A perfect fit straight line in a thick fog, so you
When shapes fit together like tiles, without any gaps, could see nothing to keep you on
the pattern is called tessellation. Triangles, identical course, you would in fact veer
quadrilaterals, and hexagons tesselate, but slightly to one side and walk
pentagons do not. Some mixtures of shapes in a big circle. The asymmetrical
tesselate, like octagons and squares. nature of your body pulls you
slightly to one side.

73
BRAIN GAMES

SHAPE SHIFTING
The puzzles on these pages are designed
to exercise your brain’s sense of 2-D shapes. Triangle tally
There are shapes within shapes to find, and Take a good look at this pyramid of
triangles, and what do you see? Lots
others to cut up and create. You’ll have of triangles, that’s for sure, but do
square eyes by the end! you know how many? You will
need to concentrate hard
to count all the triangles
within triangles—things
Tantalizing are not always as simple
tangrams as they appear!
You will need:
You can use small shapes to
• Square piece of paper
make an endless variety of
• Scissors
others. In China, people used
• Colored pens
this fact to create the game or pencils
of tangrams. Using just seven
shapes, you can make
hundreds of different designs.

Step 1
Using the tangram at left
as a guide, draw a square
on a piece of paper and
divide it into seven
individual shapes. Color
and cut out each shape.

Step 2
Practice making
pictures by rearranging
the colored pieces to
create this rabbit.
Step 3
Now try making these
images. We haven’t
shown you the different
colors of the pieces to
make things trickier.
Then have fun creating
your own designs.

74
Shapes within shapes Boxed in
These shapes can be split into equal pieces. To give you These matchstick puzzles are a great way to
a head start, the first shapes are divided already. exercise your lateral thinking. If you don’t have
matchsticks, use toothpicks instead.

Square thinking
This square has been
divided into four, but how
would you divide it into five
identical pieces? You need
to think laterally.

Puzzle 1
Can you remove
three matches
Dividing the L
to leave just
This L shape has also been
three squares?
cut up into three identical
pieces, but can you divide it
into four identical shapes?
The clue is in the shape
itself. How about about six Puzzle 2
identical pieces? Lay out 12
matches as
shown. Can you
move just two
matches to make
seven squares?

Dare to be square
The challenge here is to draw the grids below not
using a series of lines, but using squares—and the
least number possible. The good news is that the
first one has been done for you. The bad news is
that they get trickier and trickier.

Here’s how Go it alone 4 x 4 challenge


You can draw this 2 x 2 grid using just Now try drawing this 3 x 3 What is the fewest number of
3 squares, shown here in red. grid using just 4 squares. squares needed for this grid?

75
Look around you and you’ll see

ND
circles everywhere—coins,
wheels, even your dinner plate!
A circle is a great shape and
looks so simple, but try to
draw one and you’ll discover

OU
it has curious qualities.

ND
R What is pi?
In any circle—whether it’s a bicycle
wheel or a clock face—the circumference

D A divided by the diameter equals 3.141392...

ROUN
This special number is called pi and was
circumference even given its own symbol— Π—by the
Ancient Greeks. It goes on forever. The
distances in a circle are related to pi. For
example, the circumference is
In circles Π multiplied by the diameter.
A circle is a shape where all
the points around the edge are exactly
the same distance from the center.
This distance is called the radius. The diameter
3.14159265 35897 932
3846

distance across a whole circle through


the center is the diameter, and the
distance around a circle is called the
circumference. One simple way to
draw a circle is by using a
pair of compasses.

radius

ACTIVITY
In 2011, Japanese
Circle to hexagon
Draw a circle with a compass and then see
mathematician Shigero
if you can follow the pattern below
and turn it into a hexagon. We’ve provided
Kondo took 371 days to
some tips to help you. work out pi to 10 trillion
Start by placing the sharp
point of the compasses
Swing the compasses to draw a
curve that goes through the circle’s
centre and crosses its edge at two
decimal places.
somewhere on the edge
of the circle. points. Place the sharp point of the
compass on a point and repeat until
you have the pattern shown here.

Join the points using


a ruler to create a
hexagon.

76
ACTIVITY

Draw an ellipse
Not quite a circle Here’s how to draw an ellipse using two
Many people think planets orbit the Sun in
pins and some string. Try using different
circles, but in fact their paths are ellipses. An
lengths of string and see what happens.
ellipse, or oval, looks like a squashed circle, but is
still a very precise shape. A circle has one central
point, but an ellipsis has two key points, called foci. Step 1 Step 2
You can see this if you try drawing one (see right). Press two pins into a Make a circle of string that
piece of paper on a will fit loosely around the pins,
board. These are the and loop it around them. Place
two foci of the ellipse. the pencil inside the loop and
pull it tight to draw a curve
around the two foci.

ACTIVITY

On a curve
A parabola is a special type of curve
that is common in nature and useful in Find the center of
technology and engineering. If you throw a a circle with a book
ball, it falls to the ground in a curve roughly Books are handy for doing math in more ways than one.
the shape of a parabola. You can also see Draw a circle and find a book that’s larger than the circle. Then
parabolas. in man-made structures, such follow these steps for a fun way to find the circle’s center.
as the dishes of radio telescopes and
satellites. The gently curved sides of the A
B B
dishes gather signals and reflect them
to focus on a central antenna. Step 1 Step 2
Place a corner of Remove the book
the book on the and draw a line
edge of the circle between the two
(A) and mark points. This is
where the two a diameter of
edges cross the the circle.
circle (see two
points, B). B B
C

Step 3
Repeat steps 1 and
2 to find a second
diameter (see two
points, C). The point
where the two
diameters cross is the
center of the circle.

77
THE THIRD
DIMENSION
The three dimensions of space are length, width, and
height, and describing 3-D shapes is an important area
of math. Every object has its shape for a reason, so
understanding shapes helps us understand natural
objects, and also design artificial ones.

Building shapes
Some regular 3-D shapes, such as pyramids, can be
made by putting 2-D shapes together. In other cases,
Pyramid
3-D shapes like bricks are used to build 3-D shapes
like houses. Understanding the math involved helps
manufacturers or builders figure out the best way to
create their designs.

Cube
Octahedron

Tetrahedron

ttern In 1985, scientists discovered a


Crystal pajects, like trees molecule exactly the same shape
Many natural ob ,
irregular shapes
and people, have su ch
as a soccer ball—a truncated
ry regular—
but some are ve icosahedron. They called it the
ls . Crys tals are made of
as crysta er buckyball and finding it won
hich join togeth
tiny particles, w
shapes, like them the Nobel Prize.
to make simple
ore particles join
cubes. As m
they slowly grow
onto the cubes,
er.
bigger and bigg

78
Spherical world
The simplest 3-D shape is
a sphere. It is the shape
that contains the most space
within the smallest surface. It
is also very strong because it
has no corners. Objects such
as the Sun, planets, and moons
are spherical because, as they
were forming, gravity pulled The Earth is a whole set
their material together. of spherical shells: an
inner core, outer core,
mantle, and crust.
A dome is a half
sphere (hemisphere).

Stacking and packing


Thinking about 3-D shapes is an important
Most soccer balls are made part of design. Packaging, for example,
up of 12 pentagons and 20 needs to keep to a minimum the weight,
cost, and the amount of material used
hexagons, a shape called a (and usually thrown away). But packaging
also needs to protect what’s inside, and
truncated icosahedron. stack on shelves. A spherical can, for
example, would use the least metal, but
would be difficult to make, stack, and open
up, so cylinders are a better shape.

Seeing
i
We have tw n 3-D
o eyes bec
is not eno ause one
ugh to see
closing on in 3-D. Try
e eye, and
other, and then the
Oval egg Pear-shaped egg see how th
pictures a e two
re slightly
The brain different.
Perfectly egg-shaped takes the
two 2-D
pictures a
Eggs are approximately spherical, so they are easy for birds to lay nd, with th
other clue e help of
and sit on. This shape also uses less shell than a cube-shaped egg s such as
puts them sh
would. But there are a great variety of egg shapes, depending on together to adows,
a 3-D ima create
where the bird nests. Birds that nest in trees, where they are safe, ge.
lay very round eggs. Birds that nest on cliff ledges have extra-pointy
eggs that roll in circles if they are knocked, rather than off the edge.

79
BRAIN GAMES

Constructing cubes E
To solve this puzzle, you need to picture the pieces
in your head, and then rotate them to find the pairs H
that fit together to make a cube. But there are nine F
pieces, so there’s one shape too many. What are the
pairs and which is the shape that will be left over?

D
B

A I

3-D SHAPE

PUZZLES
Getting your head around these 3-D shapes is a
great workout for the brain, especially since you are
B

looking at them in 2-D. How much easier would it be E


if you could hold them in your hands to fit them
together or fold them!

A D

B Boxing up
The net of a 3-D shape is what it would
look like if it was opened up flat. These
are the nets of six cubes—or are they?
In fact, one net is wrong and will not
fold up to make a cube. Can you figure
out which one it is?

80
A B C D

Hexagonal pyramid Rectangular prism Pentagonal pyramid Pentagonal prism

Face recognition
Each of these 3-D shapes is made up of
different 2-D shapes. Your challenge is E F G
to line up the seven shapes so that each one
shares a 2-D shape with the 3-D shape that
follows it. So, for example, a cube can be
followed by a square pyramid, because they
both contain a 2-D square. The faces do not
have to be the same size.
Cube Triangular prism Square pyramid

A
Trace a trail
Can you follow all the edges of these
Did you know 3-D shapes without going over the
same line twice? Try drawing each Octahedron
that the shape of a of the shapes without lifting your pen.
You’ll only be able to do this for one
doughnut is an official shape, but which is it? And can you
figure out why?
3-D shape, called a
torus? Yum!
B

C
Cube
Tetrahedron

Building blocks
Using the single cube as a guide, can
you visualize how many would fit into
each of the larger 3-D shapes? If the This cube
the single cube represents 1 cubic represents
1 cm³
centimeter (cm³), what is the volume
of each shape?

A B

81
BRAIN GAMES

3-D FUN
Tough eggs
Explore the remarkable strength of
egg-shaped domes, and turn 2-D
The dome is a popular shape for
buildings because it can support
pieces of paper into 3-D objects with
a surprisingly large weight, as a little cutting and folding.
this egg-speriment proves.

You will need:


• Four eggs Tetrahedron
• Clear tape trick
• Pencil Create a tetrahedron from an
• Scissors envelope in a few simple steps.
• A stack of heavy books
You will need:
Step 1 • Envelope
Carefully tap the pointy • Pencil
end of an egg on a hard • Scissors
surface to break the
Step 1
• Clear tape
Seal the envelope and
shell. The rest of the
fold it in half lengthwise
egg must be unbroken.
to make a crease along
Pour out the contents
the middle.
of the egg.

Step 2
Stick clear tape around the
middle of the egg. Draw a
line around the widest part Step 2 Step 3
and ask an adult to score it Fold down one corner until it Unfold the corner,
with scissors. touches the center fold. draw a vertical line
Make a mark at this point. through the point
you marked, then
cut along it.
Open edge

Step 4 Step 5
Using the Put your hand in the
smaller part open side and open up
of the envelope, the tetrahedron,
fold it from the taping together
mark to each the open
corner, creasing edges.
Step 3 the fold on
Gently break off pieces of the Step 4 both sides.
shell from the pointy end to Set out your four eggs in a Your tetrahedron
the line, then use the scissors rectangular shape. Carefully should open
up neatly along
to snip around the line. If the place a stack of heavy books the creases
shell beyond the line cracks, on top of the shells. How
start again. Prepare three many books can you add
more eggs this way. before the eggshells crack?

82
Fold a cube
Here's how to transform a flat Step 1 Step 2 A
piece of paper into a solid cube. B
Fold the Now fold the
To make a water bomb, fill it with paper in half paper in half
water through the hole in the top! along both along both 1 2
diagonals. horizontals.
You will need: Then unfold Add labels,
• Pencil and turn over. as shown. A B
• Square of paper 3

Step 3 Step 4 Step 5


Fold points 1 Fold the two Turn the paper
and 2 onto 3, outside points over and repeat
A to A, and B of the triangle step 4.
to B, so the back to reach
paper becomes the top.
a triangle.

1 2 Make sure the


Fold neatly to corners and
create a triangle edges are flush As soon as you
3 start to blow, the
cube will inflate

Step 6 Step 7 Step 8


Fold the side Fold down the Gently pull the
points into top edges and edges out and
the center. tuck them into blow into the
the triangular hole in one end
pockets. Turn to create a cube.
over and repeat
steps 6 and 7.

Walk through
paper
Tell your friends that you
can walk through paper.
They won't believe you,
but here is the secret…

You will need:


• Pencil
• Sheet of letter-
sized paper
• Scissors

Step 1 Step 2
Draw this pattern onto Carefully open the sheet
the sheet of paper of paper and amaze your
and cut along the lines. friends as you step
through the large hole.

83
Leonhard
Leonhard Euler was an extraordinary
man whose knowledge included
many apects of math and physics. He

Euler
developed new ideas, which were used
to explain, for example, the movement
of many different objects—from sailing
ships to planets. Euler had a particular
gift of being able to “see” the answer to
problems. During his life, he published
more papers on math than anyone
else—and could also recite a
10,000-line poem from memory.

Euler’s rule
Long ago, the Ancient Greeks discovered five
regular shapes called Platonic solids. Two
thousand years later, Euler found that they
obey a simple rule: The number of
corners plus the number of faces
minus the edges always equals 2.

Face (f)
set up to improve
The Academy of Science in St. Petersburg was ry could
Russian educa tion and science, so that the count
e.
compete academically with the rest of Europ
Edge (e)

Corner, also
Tetrahedron known as a
vertex (v)
To Russia with love
Euler was born in 1707 in Switzerland, and soon devoted
himself to mathematics. After graduating from the University
of Basel, he moved to Russia to join Empress Catherine I’s v f e
Academy of Science. The academy had been founded three Tetrahedron 4 + 4 - 6 = 2
years earlier with help from the German mathematician
Cube 8 + 6 - 12 = 2
Gottfried Leibniz. Just six years after his arrival, Euler took
over from another Swiss mathematician, Daniel Bernoulli, Octahedron 6 + 8 - 12 = 2
as the academy’s head of mathematics. Dodecahedron 20 + 12 - 30 = 2
Icosahedron 12 + 20 - 30 = 2

Math and physics


With books such as A Method It is claimed that Euler once
for Finding Curved Lines, Euler
used math to solve problems upset a famous philosopher by
of physics. He wrote more than
800 papers in his life. After his “proving” that God exists,
death, it took 35 years to publish
them all. Euler even has his own saying, “Sir, a + bn/n = x,
number—2.71818…, known as
“e” or Euler’s number.
therefore God exists...”
On the move Euler was pictured on the
In the 1730s, Russia was a violent and dangerous
place, and Euler retreated into the world of Swiss 10-franc banknote
math. In 1741, he moved to the Berlin
Academy of Science to try his hand at and on many Swiss,
philosophy—but he did so badly that
he was replaced. When Catherine I
German, and Russian
of Russia offered him postage stamps.
the directorship of the
St. Petersburg Academy
in 1766, Euler accepted
and spent the rest of
his life in Russia.

The old Prussian city of Kön


now called Kalingrad, in Rusigsberg is
sia, and
its seven bridges are now five.

The Prussian problem


In 1735, Euler put forward an answer
to the so-called Königsberg bridge
problem. The city’s River Pregel
contained two islands that could be
reached by seven bridges. Was there a
route around the city that crossed
each bridge only once? Instead of
using trial and error, Euler found a
way to answer the question that gave
rise to a new area of math called
graph theory. His answer was that no
such route was possible.

Königsberg
A life of genius
Half blind for much of his life, Euler 1 3
2
lost his sight completely soon after River Pregel
his return to St. Petersburg. He was so
brilliant at mental arithmetic, however, that Island 2
Island 1 4
this had no effect on his work. When Euler was 60 years
old, he was awarded a prize for working out how the
gravities of the Earth, Sun, and Moon affect each other.
On the day he died, September 18, 1783, Euler was 7 6 5
working out the laws of motion of hot-air balloons.

85
BRAIN GAMES
Simple mazes
There’s a very easy way to solve mazes that
have all the walls connected, such as this
one. You simply put one of your hands
on the wall and keep it there as you
go—it doesn’t matter which hand,
but don’t change hands along the
way. As you’ll discover, this isn’t
the fastest route, but you’ll
always end up at the exit.

The world’s largest maze


was opened in the town of

AMAZING Fontanellato, Italy, in 2012.


The bamboo-hedge design

MAZES
is based on mazes shown
in Roman mosaics.

People have been fascinated by mazes for


thousands of years. One of the most famous is
the mythical Greek labyrinth of Crete, which had
a monster lurking inside. Mathematicians in
particular have always loved exploring mazes,
for working out solutions to seemingly hard
problems, and of course for fun.

Complex mazes
Mazes such as this one, where not all
the walls are connected, cannot be
solved using the one-hand rule (see
top of page). You’ll just end up going
around and around in circles. Instead,
you have to try and memorize your
route, or leave a trail to show which
paths you’ve been down.
86
Make a Cretan maze Mazes as networks
Created more than 3,200 years ago, the Cretan labyrinth was a very It is possible to turn a complex maze into a
simple unicursal (one-path) maze. You couldn’t get lost, but you never simple diagram, called a network. Marking
knew what lay around the next bend. Here’s how to draw your own: only the junction points and dead ends and
linking these with short lines reveals the
direct route through the maze.

G H

Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4


Draw a cross Join the top Join the left arm Join the F
and four dots right dot to of the cross to remaining dot
between the the right-hand the bottom left to the bottom
arms. Next, arm of the dot, going around of the cross,
join the top cross, going the bottom right enclosing all
E
of the cross around your dot and enclosing the lines you
to the top left curved line all the lines you have drawn— A
dot, as shown. from step 1. have drawn. and you’re done!

C
Step 1
Mark every junction and every dead end in
the maze, and give each a different letter,
as shown above. The order of the letters
doesn’t matter. Join the points with lines
to show all possible routes.

B D F G

Start A C E Finish

Step 2
Write down the letters and join them with
short lines to get a diagram of the maze in its
simplest form. Maps of underground train
systems are usually laid out like this,
making routes easier to plan.

Electronic networks
Network diagrams have many uses. In
Weave maze an electronic circuit, for instance, what
Seen from above, this mind-bending puzzle really matters is that the components
resembles a 3-D maze. Passages weave under are connected correctly. A network
and over each other, like tunnels or bridges. diagram of the circuit is much
Although a passage never ends under or over simpler to draw and check than
another path, you still need to watch out for one that takes account of the actual
dead ends in other parts of the maze. positions of the components.

87
BRAIN GAMES

Perspective play
Looking down a path going into the
distance, we assume that people or
objects will appear smaller as they
move farther away. In this photo, your
brain interprets the person farthest
away as a giantess, compared to the
figures behind her. In reality, all
three images are the same size.

OPTICAL
ILLUSIONS
The brain uses visual evidence from
the eyes to figure out what we’re
seeing. To do this, it uses all kinds
of clues, such as colors and shapes.
By making pictures with misleading
clues, the brain can be tricked.

Bigger or smaller?
Your brain tries to recognize shapes.
In the image above, your brain thinks
you are looking at three rectangular
sections of a wall from an angle. Taking
Filling in the gaps
the wall as a clue, the yellow bar on the
We rarely see the whole of an object—usually,
right must surely be farther away than
parts are obscured and the brain guesses
the one on the left? It must also be
what we’re seeing and fills in the missing
longer, since it spans the whole wall.
sections. Here, the brain fills things in to show
But try measuring both…
you a white triangle that isn’t really there.

88
Young or old?
Your brain cannot help but try to work out
what an image shows. Here, there is equal
evidence that we are seeing an old woman
and a young one. It depends on where you
look. If you focus in the middle, you are likely
to see the old woman’s eye, but look to the left
and the eye becomes the young woman’s ear.

Making waves
Believe it or not, all the lines of the shapes
below are straight. Your brain is tricked into
seeing wavy lines because of the position of
the tiny black and white squares in the
corners of the larger squares.

Color confusion A
Our brain makes adjustments
to the way colors appear in
different lighting conditions,
because it “knows” the colors B
are fixed. Here, the brain sees
square B and gives you the
information that the square is
light gray, but in shadow. In fact,
square B is the same color as A!

89
BRAIN GAMES

IMPOSSIBLE
When we look at an object, each eye
sees a 2-D image, which the brain
puts together to make a 3-D image.

SHAPES
But sometimes, the 2-D images can
trick the brain, which then comes
up with the wrong answer, and
we “see” impossible objects.

The international
recycling symbol,
Freaky fence symbolizing an
Cover first one post, and then the other.
Both images make sense. View the endless cycle, is based
whole image together, however, and
the shape is impossible. Pictures such on the Möbius strip.
as this one are made by combining
pairs of images, where each is taken
from a different angle.

Penrose triangle
The Penrose triangle is named
after Roger Penrose, the physicist
who made it famous. If you cover
any side of the triangle, it looks
like a normal shape, but put the
three sides together and the
whole thing makes no sense.

Crazy crate
Sometimes, an impossible object
can be turned into a possible one
by making a simple change. This
crate would make perfect sense if
you redrew the upright bar, seen
here to the left of the man, so that
it passed behind the horizontal
bar at the front.

90
Mathematicians don’t
just study real shapes and
spaces, they are also able to
explore imaginary worlds
in which space and
geometry are different.

Impossible?
Although this shape looks as strange as the
others on this page, it is actually the only one
that really exists—and it does not need
to be viewed from a particular
angle, either. Can you figure out
how it’s made? There’s a clue
somewhere on this page.

Fantasy fork
The three prongs of this fork make no sense if you
follow them up to see how they meet at the top.
But cover the top or bottom half of it, and both
ends look fine. The illusion works because there
is no background. If you tried coloring in the
background, you would get really confused!

Strange strip
The Möbius strip, discovered in
1858, is a most unusual shape.
For a start, it has only one
surface and one edge. Don’t
believe it? Make a strip for Step 1 Step 2 Step 3
yourself and then run a All you need to create a Give one end of your strip To see if the strip really
highlighter along an Möbius strip is paper and of paper a single twist, then does have only one surface,
outside edge and see glue or tape. Cut a long use a dab of glue or a piece draw a line along the center
what happens. strip of paper. It should be of tape to join the two ends of the strip. Now cut along
about 12 in (30 cm) long of the paper strip together. this line—you may be
and 1.5 in (3 cm) wide. surprised by the result.

91
A world
of
math
INTERESTING When you cross the
International Date Line

TIMES
from west to east, you
move ahead one day.
The clocks show how many hours
behind or ahead of Greenwich,
England, each time zone is.

Everyone knows what time is, but try


putting it into words. Whatever it is,
we use time for all kinds of things,
from boiling an egg or catching a bus
to knowing when to blow the whistle
at a soccer game. Extra time, anyone?
Crossing continents
Russia stretches from
Europe to Asia and
crosses 9 time zones.

Dividing time
The Egyptians were the first to
divide the day into 24 hours,
but their hours were not all
the same length. To make
sure that there were always
12 hours from sunrise to
sunset, they made the hours
The poles
longer during summer days Greenwich Meridian
Time zones meet at the North and
and winter nights. South Poles. By walking around the
points of the poles, you can travel
through all the time zones in a
few seconds.

Lengths of time
• Millennium (1,000 years)
• Century (100 years)
• Decade (10 Years)
• Leap year (366 days) Natural units
• Year (365 days) Although exact times are
• Month (28, 29, 30, or 31 days) based on the second, we
• Lunar month (about 29.5 days) also use three units based
• Fortnight (14 days) on natural events:
• Week (7 days) • A day is one rotation of
• Day (24 hours) the Earth on its axis.
• Hour (60 minutes) • A lunar month is one full
• Minute (60 seconds) cycle of the Moon.
• Second (basic unit of time) • A year is the time it takes
• Millisecond (thousandth Earth to orbit the Sun.
of a second)
• Microsecond (millionth
of a second)
• Nanosecond (billionth
of a second)

94
Time zones Super-accurate
The world is divided into 24 time zones, with the time Most modern clocks contain a quartz
in each zone measured in hours ahead of or behind crystal that sends out a regular pulse
the Greenwich Meridian. This is the imaginary line of electricity, and use this to keep time.
at 0�longitude that joins the North and South Poles They are accurate to a few seconds a
and passes through Greenwich, England. On the year. The world’s most accurate clocks
opposite side of the Earth, at 180�longitude, is the rely on the lengths of light waves from
International Date Line. This imaginary line metal atoms and would not lose a
separates two different calendar days. second in a billion years.

Light-years
Light-years are a measure of
International Date Line
distance, not time. One light-year
is the distance light travels in one
year, about 5.88 trillion miles
(9.46 trillion km).

Time travel
In 2011, Samoa shifted the
International Date Line from its
Your body clock runs
west coast to its east coast, skipping
Friday, December 30, altogether! faster when your brain
is hot, such as when you
have a fever.

ACTIVITY

Body clock
Humans have a built-in sense of time, or
“body clock.” It is driven by the rhythms of
the day, such as light and darkness. If you
fly across several time zones, it can get
very confused and you may suffer from jet
lag. Why don’t you test your sense of time?
Before you go to sleep, set your mind to
wake you up at a particular time the next
morning. When you wake up, check
yourself against a clock. You’ll almost
certainly wake up on time.

95
MAPPING
Maps are a way of showing information as pictures or shapes.
The most familiar ones help us find our way, representing
streets and landscapes using words, symbols, and colors to
give as much information as possible. These maps are usually
“to scale.” This means that a fixed distance on the map
represents a fixed distance in the real world.

Maps of everything
A map is a way of showing information
in pictures so that it’s easier to
understand. There are maps for all
kinds of things—a flow diagram is a
way to map the process for building a
car, for example. Not all maps are to
scale—a map of the subway, for example.
And a mind map is a way of showing
how our brains come up with ideas.

96
Even on a scale map, not everything
is to scale. For instance, roads are Contours
nearly always drawn wider, so that A map is flat but a hill isn’t, so
how can we show a hill on a map?
their details are clear. The answer is to use contour lines.
These connect all the points that are the
same height above sea level: One contour
line, for example, goes through every point
at a height of 30 ft (10 m), one through the
points at 40 ft (15 m), and so on.

Locat
i
Landsca ons a
pe s num
horizonta maps feature a bers
l lines m grid of n
run from ove from umbere
south to w d lines.
lines 45 north. A est to east, and The
and 01 c parking the verti
ross is a lot in the ca
be writte
n as “45 t gr square w l lines
east, 1 n id reference 450 here the
orth,” or 1. This c
as map a
coordina n also 35
tes: 45,0 30
1. 25
ACTIVIT 20
Y 15
10
On th 05
Looking
e map
at the m
can you ap,
fig GPS s
coordina ure out the u pport
tes for th Finding
church e out whe
and on a ma re
the cam p can be you are
psite? using a tricky—
GP but
System) S (Global Positio
device c ning
informa an
tion from help. Using
Contour lines
it finds y satellite
ou s,
displays r exact location
it on a m ,
can eve ap, and
n give
you dire
ctions.
Scale 1:12,000
0 5 10 miles

0 5 10 15 kilometres

Understanding scale
Since landscape maps are a representation of an area,
things need to be in the right places, and the right distances
apart. To make the map small enough to be useful, the
image has to be scaled down, so that everything is made
smaller in the same proportion. A typical street map might
have a scale of 1 in to 1,000 ft. In other words, an inch on
the map represents 1,000 ft in the real world. The scale is
written as 1:12,000, since 1,000 ft is equal to 12,000 in.

97
Grace

Hopper Math professor and naval officer Grace


Hopper was a pioneer of computer science.
Her trailblazing work in developing computer
languages, programming, and software led
to computers coming out of specialist science
labs and into the wider world, becoming
essential in virtually every office,
classroom, and home.
The IBM Au
also known tomated Sequence Co
capable of as the Harvard Mark ntrolled Calculator
doing auto I, was the fir ,
matic calcul st compute
ations. r UNIVAC I
After the war, Hopper helped build the Universal
War work Automatic Computer (UNIVAC I), the first commercial
In 1943, Grace Hopper left her job as a math all-electronic computer. The gigantic machine had
professor to enlist in the US Navy and help the US 200 miles (322 km) of wiring and 5,000 tubes. More
fight in World War II. She worked on one of the world’s than 46 UNIVAC machines were sold. In the 1960s,
first computers, the massive, room-sized Harvard NASA used later UNIVAC hardware to communicate
Mark I. One of the first three people with the job title with the astronauts on the Apollo moon missions.
of “coder” (now called programmer), Hopper wrote
the first-ever computer manual—a top-secret text on
how to write codes to calculate rocket trajectories and
make computing tables for the design of torpedoes
and underwater detection systems.
A new
language
During the
1950s, Hopper
A bug in realized the need
the system for a common
Hopper often gets the credit for programming
coming up with the term “bug” language that could
to describe a computer glitch, be used on different
and although earlier engineers computers. She invented a way of using
had already coined the term, human language to talk to computers
she was the one who made it to make it easier for businesses and
famous. In 1947, when her non-mathematicians to operate them.
machine began to malfunction, This meant that, instead of entering
the team found a moth lodged mathematical formulae or symbols,
in the computer’s circuits. a person could type a command in
Hopper put the moth in her English. She called this language
diary and wrote “first actual COBOL (Common Business Oriented
case of bug being found!” Language), and it went on to transform
how computers were used.

98
A long career
Throughout her career in the computer industry,
Hopper remained a Navy reservist, and finally
retired at the age of 79 as a rear admiral. In
1997, the Navy launched a new, high-tech
destroyer, the USS Hopper, named in her
honor. In 1992, she was awarded the
US’s highest honor in her field, the
National Medal of Technology and
in 2016, more than a decade after
her death, she was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom.

High-level Language
print//: _”hello”_

Compiler

Machine Code:
11010010110 10110100101 00010101
001101111101 101000111010 1011010
01010101010 10100101010 10111010
10010110101 10101110101 01010010
01101010110 10101000101 01010011
01110011010 10010111101 10011101

Computer compiler
In 1952, Hopper’s team developed
A-0—an early version of something
called a “compiler.” The compiler
worked by helping to translate a
programming language, which
contained words and mathematical
symbols, into a machine-readable
code known as binary code, made
up of only the digits 1 and 0.
PROBABILITY
Probability is the branch of math that deals with the
chance that something will happen. Mathematicians
What are the chances?
express probability using a number from zero to one. Working out chances is quite simple. First, you
A probability of zero means that something definitely need to count the number of possible outcomes.
The chance of throwing a die and getting a four
won’t happen, while a probability of one means that it is one in six (1⁄6), because there are six ways for
definitely will. Anything in-between is something that the die to fall, just one of which is the four. The
may happen and can be calculated as chances of throwing an odd number (1, 3, or 5)
is one in two (3⁄6 = ½) or 50 percent.
a fraction or percentage of one.

How chance adds up


The chance of a tossed coin being a
head is ½ (one in two). The chances of
a head then a tail is ½ x ½ = ¼. The
chances of a head then another head
(which can be written HH to save space)
is also ¼. The chances of three tails
in a row (TTT) is ½ x ½ x ½ = 1⁄8.

1st toss 2nd toss 3rd toss


½ H

½ H ½ T
½ H
H
½ ½ T
½ T
½ H
½ ½ H
T ½ T
½ T ½ H

½
T
Chaos
chance: ½ chance: ¼ chance: 1⁄8 Some things, such as where a
pinball will bounce, are almost
impossible to predict. Each ball you
But don’t risk it!
fire takes a slightly different route.
It’s tempting to think that if you have
Even the tiniest differences in the
tossed four heads in a row, the next
ball’s starting position and how
toss is more likely to be a head. But it’s
much you press the flipper or pull
equally likely to be a tail: The chance
the spring become magnified into
of HHHHT is ½ x ½ x ½ x ½ x ½ = 1⁄32,
major changes in direction as the
and the chance of HHHHH is
ball bounces around the table.
exactly the same.
This unpredictable behavior is
called “chaotic.”

100
The house always wins
Ever wondered how casinos make money? They
make sure the chances of winning are stacked in
their favor. Casino games give the “house” (the
casino itself) a statistical edge that means it wins
more often than it loses. For example, if you bet on
a number in a game of roulette, you have a 1 in 36
chance of winning. But a roulette wheel also has a
37th space for zero. This ultimately gives the casino
an advantage. It will win more games than it loses,
since it doesn’t pay anyone if the ball lands on the
zero. It’s this zero that gives the house its “edge.”

TY
ACTIVI

What are the odds?


The chance of a shuffled pack of Sometimes our brain misleads us. We can
be influenced by things that aren’t really true.
cards being in the right order is For example, books and blockbuster films lead
us to believe that sharks are very dangerous to
less than one in a trillion trillion humans. In reality, however, more people are killed
by hippos than sharks. Try putting these causes
trillion trillion trillion. of death in order of probability:

Computer game exhaustion

Snake bite

Hippo attack

Walking into a lamppost

Falling down a manhole

Playing soccer

Hit by a falling coconut

Predictions Struck by lightning


Using probability, you can try to predict or forecast things that
are going to happen. For example, imagine you have a bag Hit by a meteorite
containing five red balls, six blue balls, and seven yellow balls.
What color ball are you most likely to pull out—red, blue, or Shark attack
yellow? The answer is yellow because there are more yellow
balls in the bag, so the probability is higher for this color.
Predictions aren’t always correct. You could pull out a red
or blue ball—it’s just less likely to happen.

101
BRAIN GAMES

DISPLAYING

DATA
A crime tally
It can be tough for a superhero to decide
which villain to tackle first. A simple tally
of their evil deeds is a great way to see at
a glance who’s the worst threat to the city.

Numero

When you want to know what’s going on


in the world, you need the facts—or data.
Pi Man
This will often be in the form of a lot of
numbers that don’t tell you much at first,
but present them in the right way and
you’ll get the picture. Here’s the latest
data on superhero activity...

Graphic picture 100 There were a record


Using a line graph to plot data number of crimes
during a prison break
over time—like the number of 80
crimes in your city—it’s easy to
60
spot those times when villains
are in town. And if a superhero 40
can find a pattern, it makes the
20
job a lot easier!
0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

100 60 supervillains
were born with Bar none
their powers
80
One way to fight tomorrow’s evildoers
is to find out where supervillains get
60 their powers from and use this knowledge
Alien powers are the
to beat them. A bar chart like this, where
Gamma radiation

most common kind


40 the heights of the bars show the number
Magical item
experiments
Government

of supervillains with powers of a certain


Genetics

20 source, compares them at a glance.


Alien

102
Name Secret identity Sidekicks Hero or villain Arch-nemesis On the table
Knowing all the facts about your
Math Man Yes Yes Hero Numero
fellow heroes and villains can
Calcutron No No Hero None come in very handy. A simple table
of information is helpful because
The Human Shape No Yes Hero None
it presents multiple facts in a
Numero Yes No Villain Math Man clear and effective manner.
Pi Man Yes Yes Villain None

Arrival of
Pie in the sky
supervillain Even superheroes can fail
44% Strength
sometimes. What went wrong?
17%
Depletion of Handy pie charts like this one,
powers 40%
Cape in which the area of each slice
malfunction
12% is a fraction of the whole, show Speed
8%
the major areas for concern.

Other 4%

Intelligence
40%
Check it out
If you’re looking to recruit new
superheroes into your legion, and
Math Man Calcutron you need to know if they’ve got Agility
what it takes, a simple checklist 12%
Organic lifeform Flight Synthetic lifeform of their powers can help you
Immortal make an informed decision.
Super strength Super
intelligence
X-ray vision
Powers
Wears a cape Doesn’t wear 23%
a cape

Flight
Who does what? Super strength
When you put a team of superheroes Profile pictogram
Invisibility When drawing up the profile of
together, you need a good range of
skills. Venn diagrams are an ideal Telekinesis the perfect superhero, a pictogram
method of comparing characteristics Super intelligence is a great way to show the balance
of qualities you’re looking for. It
and showing which are shared—and Psychic powers
which are not. combines a range of information
within one fact-packed picture.
Here, the depths of the coloured
areas reflect the mix of qualitites.

103
BRAIN GAMES

LOGIC PUZZLES
AND PARADOXES
To solve these puzzles, you need to think
carefully. This area of math is called logic—you
get the answer by working through the problem,
step by step. But watch out, one puzzle here is a
paradox, a statement that seems to be absurd or
to contradict itself.

Black or white?
Amy, Beth, and Claire are wearing hats, which they know
Logical square are either black or white. They also know that not all
Each of the colored squares below contains a three are white. Amy can see Beth and Claire’s hats, Beth
different hidden number from 1–8. Using the can see Amy and Claire’s, and Claire is blindfolded. Each
clues, can you work out which number goes where? is asked in turn if they know the color of their own hat.
The answers are: Amy—no, Beth—no, and Claire—yes.
What color is Claire’s hat, and how does she know?

4
0 9
5 ? ? ?

7
Four digits
A barber’s dilemma What is the four-digit
A village barber cuts the hair of number in which the
everybody who doesn’t cut their first digit is one-third of

6 own. But who cuts his hair?

• If he does, then he is one


the second, the third is
the sum of the first and
second, and the last is
• The numbers in the dark blue and dark green of those people who cuts their three times the second?

??
squares add up to 3. own hair.
• The number in the red square is even.
• The number in the red square and the number
• But he doesn’t cut the hair of
people who cut their own hair. ? ?
below it add up to 10. So he doesn’t cut his own hair.
• The number in the light green square is twice the • But he is the man who cuts the
number in the dark green square. hair of everyone who doesn’t cut
• The sum of the numbers in the last column is 11 their own hair.
and their difference is 1. • So he does cut his hair… which
• The number in the orange square is odd. takes us back to the start again.
• The numbers in the yellow and light green squares
add up to one of the numbers in the bottom row.

2 8 3
1
104
People with pets
Four friends each have a pet. There’s a cat, a fish,
a dog, and a parrot. The pets’ names are Nibbles,
Buttons, Snappy, and Goldy. From what the friends
are saying below, can you figure out who has which Cat Fish Dog Parrot
pet, and the names of each animal?

I don’t have I’m allergic to fur,


My pet isn’t a a dog... so my pet doesn’t
goldfish or a dog,
have any, and my
but it is named
pet has the second
Nibbles.
shortest name of
the four.

...and I know
Goldy is a cat.
My pet is named Cecilia
Buttons and likes
swimming. Dave
Anna If you’re having trouble, try
drawing a grid with the
people’s names in the first
column, and then filling in any
Bob clues you’ve worked out.

Lost at sea
It’s a foggy gray day at sea
and, viewed from the air, you
can only make out some
empty blue water and parts
of ships. Can you find out
where the rest of the fleet is
located? Every ship is
surrounded on all sides by
squares of empty water.

Fleet:
6 Dinghies:

4 Yachts:

2 Cruisers:

105
Charles Babbage
The English mathematician Babbage (1791–1871)
was a champion code breaker. In 1854, he broke a
famous military cipher that used 26 alphabets to
encipher each message. This discovery was used
to decipher Russian messages during the Crimean War.
Babbage invented the first true computer, and although
it was not built in his lifetime, English mathematician
Ada Lovelace had written what we would now call
its program—the first in the world.

Agnes Meyer Driscoll


Driscoll (1889–1971) was one of the best
code breakers of the 20th century. Working
for the U.S. Navy, she broke some of the most
difficult codes of the time, including many
of those used in the world wars. Sometimes
known as “Madame X,” Driscoll also helped
develop code-breaking machines and
teach other code breakers.

BREAKING
Encryption
Financial transactions are almost always sent
by computer, and they need to be kept secret
so that no one can steal information about

CODES
the sender’s or receiver’s bank accounts.
The transactions travel through the
Internet, along wires, and through space
as radio signals. Since these messages are
easy to tap, they are turned into ciphers, or
encrypted, for their journeys.

Frequency analysis
If you have a secret message to read, call Simple ciphers can be broken by frequency
analysis (counting how often each symbol
in the experts! Both codes and ciphers occurs). Each symbol stands for a letter in
make readable messages unreadable, and the original text (the plaintext), so the most
common symbols should represent the
both can be cracked using math. Codes most common letters. In English, the most
change each word to a code word, symbol, common letters are E and T, in German
they’re T and A, and in Spanish they’re E and A.
or number. Ciphers jumble the letters or By substituting these letters for their encrypted
replace them with different symbols versions, the plaintext can be worked out.

106
TY
ACTIVI Thomas Jefferson
A decade before he became president,
Codes everywhere Jefferson (1743–1826) invented a
There are codes all around us, and many of revolutionary coding machine called a
them are designed to be read by machines. “wheel cypher.” He went on to oversee
If you have a smartphone, there will be at and develop several other ciphers, too.
least one “bar code scanner” app for it. You They were used to send messages to
can use this to read the bar codes of all kinds Europe and to keep in touch with secret
of products in stores or even just items on missions. The U.S. military adopted
your kitchen shelves. See what information Jefferson’s wheel ciphers, using
comes up about them. Try using it to scan them from 1922 until 1942.
library books, too.

Sir Francis
Walsingham
During the reign of Elizabeth I of
England, spying was widespread.
Walsingham (c. 1532–90) was a master
spy. He discovered an assassination plot
by Elizabeth’s cousin, Mary, Queen of
Scots, by intercepting Mary’s messages.
His code-breaking expertise
led to Mary’s execution.

Public key encryption Hacker


One big math breakthrough of the early 1970s was public A hacker is someone who breaks into
key encryption. A key is the name for the information computer systems, either just for fun
needed to make or decode a cipher. Used for all e-mails or to steal valuable information. Hacking
and texts, this system means that only the intended into a computer system often involves
recipient can read the message. The way it works is that decrypting (decoding) computer code
the recipient’s computer system invents a pair of keys: or messages. Sometimes, hackers are
one to encrypt and one to decrypt. The sender uses the employed by computer companies to test
encrypt key to encrypt a message to the recipient. This their systems and make them more secure.
message can be read only by the recipient because only These hackers are sometimes nicknamed
he or she has the decrypt key to unlock its contents. “white-hat hackers.”

To test security, an IBM


employee named Scott Lunsford
tried to hack into the computer
system of a nuclear power plant.
It took him just a day.

107
BRAIN GAMES

Caesar cipher Make a cipher


The Caesar cipher is named after the Roman General wheel
Julius Caesar and is a code based on substitution—replacing To write and decode a substitution
one letter of the alphabet with another. For example, you cipher easily, you need a cipher
could replace each letter with the one that follows it, so wheel. Both you and the person
“b” becomes “c”, “c” becomes “d”, and so on. In trickier you are sending the message to
versions, the letters might be two or three steps ahead, need one, and you both need
so “a” would be “d”, and “b” would be “e”. Can you can to know the key to the
decipher the following message: letter substitution.

ZHOO GRQH WKLV LV D KDUG FRGH


To figure out what the letter-gap is, think You will need:
about what the one-letter word might be. • Paper • Pencil
• Scissors • Ruler
• Paper fastener

Substitution cipher Look for Y in the bottom


row, and then look above
In a Caesar cipher, the coded alphabet runs in order: it to see which letter it
really is—C
It’s just the position that changes. In a substitution
cipher, however, the coded alphabet is not in order. YTRJWYLKCJPFK
Using the cipher below, what does this message say?

Step 1
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Copy the two wheels shown here
L C Y R J P D O A V Z H B K T X G S W U F E M I N Q and cut them out. Put the smaller
one on top, divide them both into
26 equal parts as marked, and
fasten them together in the middle.

B C D E
A Y R J F
Z L C
Q P
T F E M I X

G
N

D
H I J K

Step 2
W Y

In the outer circle write the


O A

alphabet in the correct order,

CODES AND and in the inner circle write the


cipher alphabet (you can use
the one at left, or make your

CIPHERS
own). Decide on a key letter,
V
V

for example X = P.
Z
U

Step 3
H
U

Give the wheel to a friend


B and provide them with the
L

W K key letter as a starting point.


M When they align the inner X
S T X G S to the outer P, the rest of the
N cipher will be revealed.

O P Q R
108
Polybius cipher Shape code
Polybius (c. 200–118 bce) was a Greek historian who Each of the 11 colored shapes stands for
worked for the Romans and devised a new kind of a number between 0 and 12. Can you
cipher. An English version would look like the one work out the value of each shape using
below. To use it, you take the pair of numbers that math and logic?
represents each letter in the message. H is in row 2,
column 3, so its ciphered number is 23.

1 2 3 4 5
= X
1 A B C D E
2 F G H I J
= X
3 K L M N O
4 P Q R S T = X
5 U V W X YZ
= X
Step 1
Using the cipher above, decode the following message.
The letters all run together, making it trickier.
= X
45 23 24 44 24 44 11 52 15
43 55 35 32 14 13 35 14 15
= X
Step 2
Give a copy of the cipher to a friend and send each
other hidden messages. You can also create your
own cipher by mixing up the order of the letters— = X
just be sure that everybody has the same cipher!

= X

e = X
i g h t hav
c i p h er m t was
a r’s u ti = X
s b time
Start by thinking
C a e p l e , e
about which
s i m t h numbers could

been ecause at ed to
make this
equation work

ive b t us
effect le weren’ odes. = X
peop idea of c
the
= X X

109
British prime minister Winston Churchill
once said that Turing’s work shortened
World War II by two years.

Alan A young
SherbornTuring as a stu

Turing
e Schoo de
l in Dors nt at
et, UK

Early life
Turing was born in London on
June 23, 1912. His father worked
as a civil servant in India, and not
It was Alan Turing’s brilliant mathematical mind that long afterward his parents returned
there, leaving Turing and his older
helped the Allies win World War II by developing new brother in the care of family friends
types of code-breaking machines. He then went on to in England. As a boy, Turing excelled
at math and science. At the age of
build some of the world’s first computers, and was 16, he came across the work of the
a pioneer in the development of intelligent machines, great scientist Albert Einstein and
became fascinated by his big ideas.
the science we now call artificial intelligence.

The Turing machine


In 1931, Turing went to King’s College, Cambridge, to
study mathematics. It was here that he published a
paper in 1936 about an imaginary device that carried
out mathematical operations by reading and writing
on a long strip of paper. Later known as a “Turing
machine,” his idea described how a computer could
work long before the technology existed to build
one. Later the same year, Turing went to the United
States to study at Princeton University.

where
Cambridge University,
King’s College, part of 1. The computer room at the
Turing stu died from 193
him.
college is named after
Code-cracking
Turing returned to England in 1938, where
the British government asked him to work on
deciphering German codes. When World War II
Turing was a world-class broke out, Turing moved to Bletchley Park,
marathon runner. He the secret headquarters of the Code and
Cipher School. With his colleague Gordon
came in fifth in the Welchman, Turing developed the “Bombe,”
a machine that could decipher German
qualifying heats for the messages encrypted (coded) on a
typewriter-like device called the
1948 Olympic Games. Enigma machine (right).

110
The Pilot ACE was based
larger computer. It sped on Turing’s plans for a
fields, including aeronau up calculations in various
tics.

The first computers


After the war, Turing moved to the
Britain’s National Physical Laboratory,
where he designed a computer called the
Automatic Computing Engine (ACE) that
was able to store program instructions in
an electronic memory. It was never built,
but it led to the development of the Pilot
ACE, one of the first general-purpose
computers. In 1948, Turing moved to
Manchester University to work on
computer programming there. Some of
these early computers were vast, filling
whole rooms and weighing many tons.

Turing was given


an award for service to
his country during
World War II.

Turing’s test
Turing wanted to know whether a
Tragic suicide
Turing was gay at a time when
machine could be considered capable
homosexuality was illegal in
of thinking. In 1950, he devised an
Britain. Because of this, he faced
experiment to see whether a computer
persecution and the threat of
could convince someone asking it
imprisonment. In 1954, Turing took
questions that it was, in fact, human.
his own life. This statue of him is in
Turing’s “imitation game”, now known
Bletchley Park, today a museum
as the Turing test, is still used to
about the secret code-breaking
determine a machine’s ability to
activities of World War II.
show humanlike intelligence.

111
ALG3BRA
There’s an important area of math
called algebra that replaces numbers
with symbols (often letters of the Find the formula
Algebra uses formulas to solve problems. A formula
alphabet) in order to solve a problem. is kind of like a recipe—it gives you the ingredients
In addition to mathematicians, and tells you what to do with them. Scientists use
formulas for all kinds of things. For example, having
scientists use algebra to find out received a radio signal from a spacecraft, scientists
things about the world. can work out how far away the spacecraft is using
the formula below. It uses the metric system, which
is used internationally in science.

Distance = Time x Velocity (speed) of radio waves


Simple algebra
The difference between arithmetic and algebra can be Put in the information you know to get the answer.
seen by writing the same calculation two ways:
Time—in this case the radio waves reached Earth
In arithmetic: 4 + 5 = 5 + 4 in 10 seconds
In algebra: x + y = y + x
Velocity—radio waves travel at 300,000 km/second
You can tell that, in this case, x = 4 and y = 5.
So the distance = 10 seconds x 300,000 km/second
The first is a simple equation. The algebra, however,
gives you the rule for any numbers you want to use as Distance = 3 million km
x and y. You can see this in the following example:

x+y=z

If you are given the values of x and y, then you can work
out what z is. So if x = 3 and y = 5:

3+5=z
z=8

Balancing eq
ua
The most common tions
type of formula
is an equation. This
is a mathematical
statement that two
things are equal.
Think of equations
as balancing acts—
what is on one side
of the “equals”
sign must be the sa
me as what’s
on the other. For ex
ample, the total
mass of a spacecra
ft can be described
using the equation:

total mass = rocket


+ capsule + fuel
+ equipment + crew

112
Sci
Afte enti
The word “algebra”
r f
now centurie ic e comes from the name of
unde s of
w
qua
that r
expl stand m ork, scie tions
For e
x
ain h
o
spre ample, w the wo the equ
any
of ntist
s a book by the ancient Arab
ads they r a
exac th k
tly h rough th now how orks.
ld w tions
mathematician Al Khwarizimi.
obje o w st e Un grav
ct r i i
they in spac ongly it w verse an ty
can e . W i l l aff d
spac fi ith
eshi gure out this kn ect an
p on h ow owle
a tou t d
r of o send a ge,
the p
lane Finding patterns
ts.
When there is a pattern to numbers, you
can use it to figure out other information.
For example, scientists on the planet Zog
want to build a rocket 110 urgs (u) long
and need to know how many vons of krool
to use. They have this data about other
rockets they have constructed:

Length Vons of krool

30 u 140

60 u 200

80 u 240

100 u 280

The pattern that fits all the numbers


above leads to the following equation:

Vons of krool = length x 2 + 80

So their new rocket would need


110 x 2 + 80 = 300 vons of krool.

TY
ACTIVI

Lunar lightness
Try this problem for yourself. The table below shows the
weights of various objects on the Earth and on the Moon.

Object Weight on Earth Weight on Moon

Apple 6 oz 1 oz

Robot 300 lb 50 lb

Moon lander 18 tons 3 tons

Can you find the equation that relates weight on the


Earth to weight on the Moon? How much would you
weigh on the Moon?

113
BRAIN GAMES

BRAINTEASERS
You use algebra to solve problems all the time—
you just don’t notice it. As you think through the
puzzles on these pages, you’ll be using algebra,
but when it’s disguised in everyday situations
or a fun brainteaser, it’s not that scary!

In algebra, “x” means


an unknown number.
That’s why an
unknown quality in a
person is called “the
Cake bake
x-factor.” Jim has been asked to bake a cake for a friend’s
birthday, and is given the following recipe:

• 16 tbsp butter
• 2 cups sugar
• 4 eggs
• 4 cups flour

At the last minute, Jim realizes that he does not have


enough eggs. The stores are closed, so he decides to
petals
A number of, the numbers on adapt the recipe to work with three eggs. What are the
each flower below
In and new quantities of butter, sugar, and flour he should use?
have been added
the outside petals y to m ak e the
same wa
multiplied in the n yo u figur e out
le. Ca
number in the midd sw er
is, and find the an
what the pattern
r?
to the third flowe

1
3 6

2 56 7 ?
7 96 2 4 9

5
8 3

114
In a flap
There is an apple tree and a beech tree in
a park, each with some birds on it. If one In t
bird from the apple tree were to fly to the h
In mat e b
beech tree, then both trees would have h equa alance
on the tions, y
le ou wan
the same number of birds. What is the same a ft of an equa t the th
ings
difference between the numbers of birds? s those ls sign
the we o to
ights o n the right— be the
scale a n eithe just as
re r sid
how m equal. So, in e of a balan
an th ce
balanc y golf balls w e puzzle be d
e the t o u ld low,
hird sc you ne
ale? ed to

15 golf balls 18 golf balls

A fruity challenge You’re on your own


Each type of fruit in these grids is
worth a different number. Can you work
out what the numbers are? When you
have this information, figure out what
the missing sum values at the end of
every row and column are.

With a little help


71
54

48

60
Once you know what
a pineapple is worth,
you can then find out
Start here to work
out how much a
70 80
the value for oranges pineapple is worth

115
SECRETS OF THE
UNIVERSE
In the hands of scientists, math has the power
to explain the Universe. Science is all about
proving theories—and to do that, scientists Plant breeding project
need to use math to make predictions from
the theory. If the predictions turn out to be
correct, then the theory probably is, too.
All the flowers
are pink, so One-quarter of the
pink must be the flowers are white,
dominant color so the pink flowers
must have been
A world of math carrying white
In the 16th century, the great scientist and inventor flower genes
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) discovered that many
things that happen in the world can be described Three-quarters
of the flowers
by simple mathematics, from falling objects and are pink
the strength of bridges to musical notes. After
Galileo, nearly all scientists tried to find the
mathematical laws to describe
exactly how things work.

The math of life


Gregor Mendel (1822–1884), an
Austrian scientist and monk, found
that simple math applies to some of the
characteristics of living things. Features
such as flower color or eye color, for
example, are always passed on from
parents to offspring according to
probabilities (see pages 100–101).
His work was the beginning of
the science of genetics.

Galileo built powerful


telescopes to study
astronomy, and
sold others to the
military for spotting
enemy ships.
116
The simple truth
Until the early 20th century, math was used
to add detail to scientific theories, to prove
them, and to use them. Since then, however,
math has often been used to suggest theories. When
there are several theories to choose from, the one that
is mathematically simplest is usually right. Genius
physicist Albert Einstein (1879–
1955) found the correct
equations to explain gravity
by choosing the simplest.

Mighty machines
Mathematicians are more likely
to spend their time looking for
patterns, coming up with ideas, or
trying to prove new theorems than
doing calculations. Why bother,
when there are computers to do
the work for us? The most powerful
supercomputers can work billions of
times faster than any human being.
Their extraordinary number-
crunching abilities mean scientists
can test their theories more
thoroughly than ever before.

Nothing’s perfect
In 1931, Austrian-born mathematician
Kurt Gödel (1906–1978) published a
revolutionary theorem. He showed that
Fields Medal-winning
it is impossible for any complicated mathematician Maryam
mathematical theory to be complete—
there will always be gaps, and there will Mirzakhani said, “The beauty of
always be statements in the theory that
can’t be proven. Math was never mathematics only shows itself
the same again!
to more patient followers.”

A world of st
One
ring
of the best theories
to explain
the Universe is calle
d string
theory. It says that
the particles
that make up atoms
in the
Universe are thems
elves made
of even tinier objec
ts that vibrate
like the strings of mu
sical
instruments. This the
ory can only
be proved mathema
tically because
it involves things too
tiny to see.

117
KATHERINE Fast learner
From childhood, Katherine
was way ahead of the rest.

JOHNSON
She raced through school,
starting college at just 15.
She soon completed all
the math courses offered,
so her professors had to
create more advanced
programs especially for
her. By the age of 18, she
had already graduated in
Katherine Johnson was a mathematician who math with the highest
played a vital role in the US Space Program. Her honors. She also studied
music, French, and
achievements are even more impressive because astronomy—which would
she grew up at a time when women, especially prove very useful in her
chosen career.
African American women like Katherine, did not
have the same opportunities as men to study
and work in the field of math.

Human computer
In 1958, Johnson got a job as a
“human computer” for the US
government, using math to research
aircraft designs. She did so well that
she was transferred to Project
Mercury at the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA), an
ambitious mission to send a human-
operated craft into orbit around the
Earth and return the astronaut home
safely. Katherine realized that she Rockets launching from Ear
d flew on the could use the principles of geometry direction Earth is spinning th can use the
Astronaut Alan Sheparin the first crewed speed, one of many factorsto help boost their
Freedom 7 spacecraft, Mercury. Its to work out the paths for the calculated when planning that must be
flight achieved by Project NASA artwork. their flight path.
trajectory is shown in this spacecraft to orbit Earth.

The math of
space flight
Katherine’s job on Apollo 11 was
to calculate the precise speed,
acceleration, and direction required to
launch the spacecraft so that it would
Moon mission arrive at the moon, a moving target.
In the 1960s, NASA began to use This was an incredibly complex task
computers instead of people to because, as well as spinning like tops,
work out trajectories. However, both the moon and Earth are also
astronauts still relied on Johnson hurtling through space on their orbit
to double-check the figures and paths—the moon around Earth, and
ensure their safety. Johnson worked Earth around the sun. Katherine had
on the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, to plot the craft’s entire flight path
when Neil Armstrong became the and accurately pinpoint where it would
first human to walk on the moon. land on its return to Earth, so that its
She also helped prepare detailed astronauts could be quickly recovered
backup navigational charts, in after splashing down in the sea.
case of equipment failure. The Apollo 11 spacecraft was
launched on a Saturn V rock
July 16, 1969, from the Ken et on
Space Center in Florida. nedy

118
Career of a pioneer
Johnson smashed through the barriers
that blocked the careers of many talented
women and African American citizens. In
1939, she was one of the first three African
American students in Virginia allowed on a
graduate study program. When she joined
NASA, she was the only woman on the
team that wrote the crucial study that
paved the way for the US Space Program.
She produced more than 40 research
papers and was NASA’s foremost expert
on the math of orbital flights.

Highest honors
The trajectory-planning math developed
by Johnson formed the framework for
NASA’s modern trajectory software and
modeling. Her immense contribution to
math and space science was recognized
in 2015 when President Barack Obama
awarded her the Presidential Medal of
Freedom, the United States’ highest
civilian honor.

119
GLOSSARY
algebra consecutive estimate
The use of letters or symbols in place of Numbers that follow one after the other. To work out a rough answer.
numbers to study patterns in math.
cube even number
angle Either a solid shape with six faces, or an A number that can be divided
A measure of how far a line needs to instruction to multiply a number by itself exactly by two.
rotate to meet another. An angle is usually three times, for example 3 x 3 x 3 = 27.
measured in degrees, for example 45°. This can be written 33. faces
The surfaces of a 3-D shape.
area data
The amount of space inside a 2-D shape. Factual information, such as numbers factors
Area is measured in units squared, or measurements. The numbers that can be multiplied
for example in2 (cm2). together to give a third number. For
decimal example, 2 and 4 are factors of 8.
arithmetic A number system based on 10, using the
Calculations that involve addition, digits 0–9. Also a number that contains a formula
subtraction, multiplication, or division. decimal place. A mathematical rule, usually written
in symbols.
axis (plural axes) decimal place
The line on a graph. The distances The position of a digit after the fraction
of points are measured from it. The decimal point. The result of dividing one number
horizontal axis is called the x-axis, by another.
and the vertical axis is called the y-axis. decimal point
The dot separating the whole part frequency
bar graph of a number and the fractions of it, How often something happens within
A type of graph that uses the heights of for example 2.5. a fixed period of time.
bars to show quantities. The higher the
bar, the greater the quantity. degrees geometry
The unit of measurement of an angle, The area of math that explores shapes.
billion represented by the symbol °.
A thousand million, or 1,000,000,000. graph
diameter A chart that shows how two sets of
chart The greatest distance across a shape. information are related, for example the
A picture that makes mathematical speed and position of a moving object.
information easy to understand, such digit
as a graph, table, or map. A single-character number, such as 1 or 9. hexagon
A flat shape with six straight sides.
cipher encrypt
A code that replaces each letter with To turn a message into code to keep horizontal
another letter, or the key to that code. the information secret. Parallel to the horizon. A horizontal line
runs between left and right, at right angles
circumference equation to the vertical. Also describes a surface
The distance around the edge of a circle. A mathematical statement that two that is flat, straight, and level.
things are equal.
code isosceles triangle
A system of letters, numbers, or symbols equilateral triangle A triangle with at least two sides of
used to replace the letters of a text to A triangle that has three angles of 60°, equal length and two equal angles.
hide its meaning. and sides of equal length.

120
line of symmetry pyramid tetrahedron
If a shape has a line of symmetry, you A 3-D shape with a square base A triangular-based pyramid.
can place a mirror along the line and the and triangular faces that meet in
reflection will give an exact copy of half a point at the top. theorem
the original shape. A math idea or rule that has been,
quadrilateral or can be, proved to be true.
measurement A 2-D shape with four straight sides and
A number that gives the amount or size four angles. Trapeziums and rectangles theory
of something, written in units such as are both examples of quadrilaterals. A detailed, tested explanation
seconds or feet. of something.
radius
octagon The distance from the center of 3-D (three-
A flat shape with eight straight sides. a circle to its edge. dimensional)
The term used to describe objects that
odd number range have height, width, and depth.
A number that gives a fraction with The difference between the smallest
0.5 at the end when divided by two. and largest numbers in a collection triangle
of numbers. A 2-D shape with three straight sides.
parallel
Two straight lines are parallel if they are ratio 2-D (two-dimensional)
always the same distance apart. The relationship between two numbers, A flat object that has only length and width.
expressed as the number of times one is
pentagon bigger or smaller than another. velocity
A flat shape with five straight sides. The speed in a direction.
right angle
percentage/percent An angle that is exactly 90°. Venn diagram
The number of parts out of a hundred. A method of using overlapping circles to
Percentage is shown by the symbol %. scalene triangle compare two or more sets of data.
A triangle with three different angles and
pi sides that are three different lengths. vertex (plural
The circumference of any circle divided vertices)
by its diameter gives the answer pi. It is sequence The corner or point at which surfaces
represented by the Greek symbol Π. A list of numbers generated according or lines meet within shapes.
to a rule, for example 2, 4, 6, 8, 10.
polygon vertical
A 2-D shape with three or more square A vertical line runs up and down, at right
straight sides. A 2-D shape with four straight equal sides angles to the horizon.
and four right angles.
polyhedron whole number
A 3-D shape with faces that are squared number A number that is not a decimal
all flat polygons. A number multiplied by itself, for example or a fraction.
4 x 4 = 16. This can also be written 42.
positive
A number that is greater than zero. sum
The total, or result, when numbers are
prime factors added together.
Prime numbers that are multiplied
to give a third number. For example, symmetry
3 and 5 are the prime factors of 15. A shape or object has symmetry (or is
described as symmetrical) if it looks
prime number unchanged after it has been partially
A number greater than one that can only rotated, reflected, or translated.
be divided exactly by itself and one.
table
probability A list of organized information, usually
The likelihood that something will happen. made up of rows and columns.

product tessellation
The answer when two or more numbers A pattern of geometric shapes that covers
are multiplied together. a surface without leaving any gaps.

121
Answers 34-35 Thinking
outside the box

1 Changing places
6-7 A world of math Panel puzzle Second place.
The extra piece is B 2 Pop!
Use a balloon that’s not inflated.
Profit margin
3 What are the odds?
Bumper cars: 60 percent of 12 is 7.2
1 in 2.
F Number of sessions: 4 x 8 = 32
C 4 Sister act
Fares per session: 32 x $2 = $64
They’re two of a set of triplets.
$64 x 7.2 = $460.80
5 In the money
Cost to run: $460.80 - $144 = $316.8
Both are worth the same amount.
Profit: $316.80 per day
6 How many?
D A You would need 10 children.
A game of chance
7 Left or right?
E There is a 1 in 9 chance of winning:
Turn the glove inside out.
90 (customers) x 3 (throws) = 270
8 The lonely man
270 ÷ 30 (coconuts) = 9
The man lived in a lighthouse.
9 A cut above
Because it would be more profitable.
12-13 Math skills 22–23 Seeing the 10 Half full
solution Pour the contents of the second
Spot the shape cup into the fifth.
1D What do you see? 11 At a loss
2C 1 Toothbrush, apple, lamp The very rich man started off as a
3C 2 Bicycle, pen, swan billionaire and made a loss.
4C 3 Guitar, fish, boat 12 Whodunnit?
4 Chess piece, scissors, shoe The carpenter, truck driver, and mechanic
are all women. Note that the question
Thinking in 2-D says fireman, not firefighter.
18-19 Problems 13 Frozen!
with numbers The match!
14 Crash!
A useful survey?
Nowhere—you don’t bury survivors.
1 The survey may be biased because it
15 Leave it to them
was carried out by the Association for
One pile.
More Skyscrapers.
16 Home
2 They only surveyed three of the
The house is at the North Pole so the
30 parks (1 in 10). This is too small
bear must be a white polar bear.
a sample to be able to arrive at a Visual sequencing
conclusion about all the parks. Tile 3
3 We don’t know how many visitors
went to the third park. Seeing is understanding
4 The fact that the other two parks had The snake is 30 ft (9 m) long.
fewer than 25 visitors all day suggests the
36-37 Number patterns
survey took place over one day, too short a 3-D vision
Prison break
time frame to draw useful conclusions. Cube 2
Doors 1, 4, 9 and 16 remain open, so
4 prisoners escape. These are all square
The bigger picture
30-31 Big zero numbers. Knowing this pattern, you can
Because tin helmets were effective at
quickly work out the answer for 50 guards
saving lives, more soldiers survived head
Roman homework and 50 prisoners, or even 100.
injuries, rather than dying from them. So
This question was designed to show why  
the number of head injuries increased,
place value makes math so much easier. Shaking hands
but the number of deaths decreased.
The quickest way to solve the problem is 3 people = 3 handshakes
to convert the numbers and the answer: 4 people = 6 handshakes
CCCIX (309) + DCCCV (805) = 1,114 (MCXIV). 5 people = 10 handshakes
The answers are all triangle numbers.

A perfect solution?
The next perfect number is 28. All perfect
numbers end in either 6 or 8.

122
44-45 How big? How far? 52-53 Pascal’s 56-57 Missing numbers
triangle
Measure the Earth
360° ÷ 7.2° = 50 Braille challenge Sudoku starter
50 x 500 miles (800 km) = 25,000 miles Look at row 6 of Pascal’s triangle
1 7 6 4 8 9 3 2 5
(40,000 km). and add up the numbers to get 64.
This means there are 64 different 5 8 9 7 2 3 1 4 6

ways to arrange the dots. For a 4 2 3 6 5 1 8 9 7


50-51 Seeing sequences four-point pattern, go to row 4 of the 3 9 2 8 4 7 5 6 1
triangle, which adds up to 16, showing
What’s the pattern? that there are 16 possible ways to
8 1 4 5 3 6 2 7 9
A 1, 100, 10,000, 1,000,000 arrange the dots. 6 5 7 9 1 2 4 8 3
B 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23 9 4 5 3 6 8 7 1 2
C 64, 32, 16, 8
7 3 1 2 9 4 6 5 8
D 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49
E 11, 9, 12, 8, 13, 7, 14 2 6 8 1 7 5 9 3 4
F 1, 2, 4, 7, 11, 16, 22
G 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21 Slightly harder
H 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, 42
7 8 5 6 9 3 1 2 4
9 6 4 5 2 1 3 8 7
54-55 Magic squares 2 1 3 8 4 7 6 5 9
Your own
3 5 6 7 8 9 2 4 1
Making magic magic square
8 4 9 2 1 6 5 7 3

7 4 9 14
24 18 32 3 11 23
11 24 7 20 3
2 7 6 2 25 4 27 22 31
1 2 7 3 5 4 8 9 6

17 5 13
1321
21 9 5 7 1 9 6 8 4 3 2
5 11 2 16 34 9 1 10 36 21
9 5 1 6 26 30 28 5 16
23 6 19 2 15 4 9 8 1 3 2 7 6 5

10 6 15 3 4 12
1225
25 8 16
6 3 2 4 7 5 9 1 8
33 14 29 8 20 7
4 3 8 12 13 8 1 12 19 15 35 17 13 10 18 1 14 22 Sujiko

66-67 Puzzling primes 7 9 6


Sifting for primes Prime cubes
21 18

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
2 8 3 2 8 3 2 8 9 3 2 1
4 6 9 6 4 9 6 4 3
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 14 15

5 4 8
7 5 1 5 7 1 5 7 1
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 2 8 9 2 8 3 2 8 3

41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 4 6 3 6 4 9 4 6 9
Kakuro
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 7 5 1 5 1 7 1 5 7

17 20 3 8
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 16 4
2 8 9 2 8 9 2 8 1
9 7 1 3
22
71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 6 4 3 4 6 3 6 4 7 13 15
8 5 8 2 5
12
81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90
5 1 7 1 5 7 9 5 3 21
8 4 9
91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 8
9
2 8 1 2 8 7 2 8 7 1 5 3
7 16 10
4 6 7 6 4 1 4 6 1 17 3
1 9 7 1 2

5 9 3 9 5 3 5 9 3 13 12
6 7 4 8

2 8 7 2 8 1 2 8 1 2 8 7

4 6 1 6 4 7 4 6 7 6 4 1

5 3 9 3 5 9 5 3 9 3 5 9

123
70-71 Triangles 74-75 Shape shifting
Triangle tally
Measuring areas There are 27 triangles in total.
The areas of the triangles are:
Tantalizing tangrams Shapes within shapes
3 x 7 = 21 21 ÷ 2 = 10.5
3 x 5 = 15 15 ÷ 2 = 7.5
4 x 4 = 16 16 ÷ 2 = 8
4 x 8 = 32 32 ÷ 2 = 16

Add them together:


10.5 + 7.5 + 8 + 16 = 42 square units
Arrow

80-81 3-D Shape


puzzles
Matchstick mayhem

Constructing cubes
A+D
H+I Fox
E+G Candle
B+C
F is the odd one out.
Dare to be square
Boxing up
Net D will not make a cube. 3 x 3 grid 4 x 4 grid
You can You can
Face recognition draw this draw this
There are many ways to do this. with just using just
Here’s just one: 4 squares. 6 squares.

1 2 3

4 5 6 7 86-87 Amazing mazes


How many more can you find? Experiment Simple mazes Complex mazes Weave mazes
with different starting shapes. Also, try
making a line of shapes that form a circle.

Trace a trail
You can trace a trail around the octahedron,
but not the tetrahedron or cube. This is
because the journey is impossible if more
than two corners of a shape have an odd
number of connections to other corners.

Building blocks
A 10 cm3
B 19 cm3
96-97 Mapping 100-101 Probability

On the map What are the odds?


Church = 44,01 The order of likelihood is:
Campsite = 42,03 1 Playing soccer 6 Struck by lightning
2 Snake bite 7 Hit by a falling coconut
3 Falling down a manhole 8 Shark attack
4 Computer game 9 Walking into
exhaustion a lamppost
5 Hippo attack 10 Hit by a meteorite

124
104-105 Logic puzzles and paradoxes

Logical square Black or white? People with pets


The hat is black. Amy could only know Anna: Nibbles (parrot).
her hat color if both Beth and Claire were Bob: Buttons (dog).
wearing white (since she knows that not Cecilia: Snappy (fish).
8 5 all three hats are white), but Amy answers
“No.” That means there must be a black
Dave: Goldy (cat).

hat on at least one of the others. Beth Lost at sea


realizes this and looks at Claire to see if
3 4 her hat is white, which would mean Beth’s
was the black one. But it isn’t, so Beth
answers “No.” So Claire must have the
2 6 black hat, and she knows this because
she heard the other sisters’ answers.

The barber’s dilemma


1 7 This story is a paradox.

Four digits
The answer is 1,349.

108-109 Codes 114-115 Brainteasers


and ciphers
A number of petals In the balance
Caesar cipher The answer is 117. The pattern is adding You need 12 golf balls.
The message reads: “Well done this up the three smallest numbers, and
is a hard code.” multiplying the total by the largest number. A fruity challenge
So (3 + 4 + 6) x 9 = 117. Pineapple = 12 Banana = 20
Substitution cipher Orange = 18 Strawberry = 15
This message reads: “Codes can be fun.” Cake bake Apple = 6 Grapes = 16
Jim will need 12 tbsp butter, 1.5 cups
54 70
Polybius cipher sugar, and 3 cups flour.
The cipher reads: “This is a very old code.” 42 71
In a flap
48 71
Shape code The difference is two. If there were seven
birds in the apple tree, for example, and one 48 66
left to even out the numbers, there would
=0 =6 54 36 42 60 70 62 80 66
need to be five in the beech tree.
=1 =8

=2 =9

=3 = 10

=4 = 12

=5

112-113 Algebra

Lunar lightness
Object are six times lighter on the Moon
than on the Earth. So, to find out how
much you would weigh on the Moon,
divide your weight by six.

125
INDEX
Braille 53 circumference 76 Egyptians, Ancient 27, 40, 44
A brain 10–11, 12–13, 14, 73 clocks 95 and fractions 26
absolute zero 31 vs. machine 16–17 COBOL 98 number system 28–29
Academy of Science, memory 13, 15 codes and code breakers 67, time system 94
St. Petersburg 84, 85 neurons 11, 16 106–111 Einstein, Albert 117
algebra 21, 112–115 and 3-D vision 79 coins electronic networks 87
al-Khwarizmi, Muhammad visualization 12, 13, 19, counterfeit 99 ellipses 77
ibn Musa 21 22–23 tossing 52, 100 encryption 67, 106
angles 43 brain games colors 12, 89 Enigma machine 110
right angle 70 brainteasers 114–115 compiler 99 equations 112–113
animals 14–15, 73 calculation tips 38–39 computer programmer 98, 99 equilateral triangle 70
Apollo 11 118 codes and ciphers computers 17, 50 Eratosthenes 45, 66
Archimedean screw 40 108–109 binary system 29 Escher,
Archimedes 40–41 displaying data 102–103 encryption 67, 106 Maurits Cornelis 61
areas, measuring 71 lateral thinking 34–35 hackers 107 eternity 60
arithmetic sequences 50 logic puzzles 104–105 history of 53, 98, 110–111 Euclid 26
art 11, 61 magic squares 54–57 supercomputers 117 Euler, Leonhard 84–85
artificial intelligence 17, 110 magic tricks 64–65 contour lines 97 eyes 11, 79, 90
Aryabhata 20 math skills 12–13 counting 12, 26–27, 28 see also visualization
asteroids 46 mazes 86–87 crime, measuring 102–103
astronomy 43, 46, 58 measurement 44–45 crystals 78
atomic clocks 95
avalanches 47
optical illusions 23, 88–91
shape shifting 74–75
cube roots 20
cubes 33, 78, 80, 81, 83, 84
F
factors 37
3-D shapes 80–83 cubic numbers 37 prime 67
visualization 22–23 curves 59, 77 Fermat, Pierre de 16
B Fibonacci (Leonardo,
Babbage, Charles 106 of Pisa) 21, 27
babies 14
Babylonians, Ancient
C D Fibonacci sequence 21,
Caesar cipher 108 data, displaying 102–103 51, 53
and base-60 system calculation 6, 27, 44–45 decagon 72 fingerprints 42
27, 28, 63 tricks and shortcuts 38–39 decibels (dB) 46 Fizz-Buzz 27
and degrees 43 calculus 41, 99 decimal system 28, 31 flatfish 73
number system 28–29 Cantor, Georg 61 degrees 43 flight trajectory 118
place-value system 27 casinos 101 diameter 76, 77 food
and zero 30 cerebrum 10–11 diatoms 73 measurements 47
Bacon, Roger 19 Ceres 58 digits 26, 28, 39 supply 50
balance 115 chance 7, 100, 101 distance, measuring 44, 71, 95 footprints 43
bar charts 102 chaos 100 division 39 forensic science 42–43
bar codes 107 checklists 103 dodecagon 72 formulas 112
barn (measurement) 47 chess 55 dodecahedron 33, 84 fractions 26, 33
base-10 see decimal children 14–15 domes 82 Freedom 7 118
system chili peppers 47 doughnuts, shape of 81 frequency analysis 106
base-60 system 27, 28, 63 China 62, 63, 74 Driscoll, Agnes Meyer 106 Fujita scale 47
beard growth 46 number system 28–29 dyscalculia 18
bell curve 59 Chongzhi, Zu 21
binary system 29 Christianity 62, 63 G
Bletchley Park 110, 111
body see human body
cicadas 67
cipher wheel 108
E Galileo Galilei 99, 116
early mathematicians 20–21 Gauss, Karl 58–59
Bombe 110 ciphers 106–109 Earth, measuring 45 genetics 116
Brahmagupta 30 circles 20, 76–77 eggs 79, 82 geometric sequences 50

126
geometry see shapes numbers cont polyhedra, regular 33
Germain, Sophie 59 K first written 27 powers 41, 43
Gödel, Kurt 117 Kakuro 57 irrational 33, 76 practice 19
golden ratio 51 Kaprekar’s Constant 65 lucky and unlucky 62–63 predictions 101
golden rectangle 51 kite 72 magic 51, 54–55 prime factors 67
golden spiral 51 Königsberg bridge problem 85 misleading 19 prime numbers 66–67
GPS (Global Positioning patterns of 36–37, prisms 81
System) 97 50–53, 113 probability 52, 100–101
graph theory 85 L perfect 37 prodigies 16
graphs 59, 102 labyrinth, Cretan 86, 87 prime 66–67 profit margin 7
gravity 79, 85, 113, 117 lateral symmetry 73 problems with 18–19 programming language
Great Internet Mersenne lateral thinking 34, 75 rational 33 98, 99
Prime Search (GIMPS) 67 Leibniz, Gottfried 84, 99 sequences 50–51 Project Mercury 118
Greeks, Ancient 26–27, 36, 37, Lemaire, Alex 38 systems of 27, 28–29, 31 public key encryption 107
71, 76, 84, 109 Leonardo da Vinci 51 very large 41, 43 pulleys 41
Cretan labyrinth 86, 87 Leonardo of Pisa see Fibonacci very small 43 pyramids 78, 81
number system 28–29 lie detectors 43 visualizing 12, 13, 19 Pythagoras 26, 32–33
see also Archimedes; light-years 95 numerophobia 18 theorem 32
Eratosthenes; Pythagoras logic 104–105, 114–115
Greenwich Meridian 94, 95 Lovelace, Ada 106
lucky numbers 62–63 O Q
Obama, Barack 119 quadrilaterals 72
H M
octagon 72
octahedron 33, 78, 81, 84
hackers 107
Harvard Mark I 98 magic numbers 51, 54–55
magic squares 54–55
optical illusions 23, 88–91
orbits 77
R
heptadecagon 58 radius 76
heptagon 72 magic tricks 64–65 Ramanujan, Srinivasa 16
hexagons 72, 76 magnetism 59 ratio 51
Hipparchus 71 Malthus, Thomas 50
maps 96–97
P rational numbers 33
Hippasus 33 packaging 79 rational thought 10
hobo scale 47 math panel puzzle 6 rectangle 72
hockey stick sums 53 learning 14–15, 18, 26–27 paper, walking through 83 rhombus 72
honeycombs 73 skills 10, 12–13 parabola 77 right angle 70
Hopper, Grace 98–99 Mayan number system 28–29 paradoxes 104 right triangle 70
horsepower 47 mazes 86–87 parallelogram 72 Roman measurements 44
human body measurements 42–47, 71 Pascal, Blaise 52 Roman numerals 28–29, 31,
body clock 95 memory 13, 15 Pascal’s triangle 52–53 62
measuring with 44 Mendel, Gregor 116 patterns 7, 36–37, 50–53, 113 rotational symmetry 73
not symmetrical 73 Mirzakhani, Maryam 117 Penrose triangle 90 roulette 101
Hypatia 21 Möbius strip 91 pentagon 72 Russia 63, 84, 85, 94
hypotenuse 32 moon 59, 113 perfect numbers 37
Moore, Gordon E 50 perspective 88
multiplication 38
music 11, 33
phi 51 S
I pi 21, 76
pictograms 103
satellite dishes 77
savants 16
icosahedron 33, 78, 79, 84
pie charts 103 scale 97
infinity 60–61
insight 11
N Pilot ACE 111 scalene triangle 70
NASA 118, 119 pinball 100 science 6, 116–117
International Date Line 94–95
nature 51, 67, 73, 116 place-value system 27, 31 scientific equations 113
intuition 34
network diagrams 87 planetarium, first 40 scientific notation 43
irrational numbers 33, 76
neurons 11, 16 planets 77, 79, 99 scientific thinking 10
Islam 62
Noether, Amalie 18 dwarf planet 58 Scoville scale 47
isosceles triangle 70
nonagon 72 plants 51, 116 seconds, counting 45
numbers Platonic solids 84 semiprimes 67
a world without 29 poles 94 sequences 50–51
J animals’ sense of 14–15 Polybius cipher 109 shadows 44
Jefferson, Thomas 107 children’s sense of 14–15 polygons 72 shape code 109

127
shapes 7, 13, 20, 26, 70–77
impossible 90–91 T V
3-D 23, 78–83 tables of information 103 Venn diagrams 103
Shepard, Alan 118 tallies 26, 102 video games, benefits of 23
sieve system 66 Tammet, Daniel 16 vision 11, 79, 90
smells, measuring 47 tangrams 74 visualization 12, 13, 19, 22–23
snowflake 73 telegraph, electric 59 volcanoes, explosivity of 46
soccer balls, shape of 79 temperature scales 31 volume, measuring 40
sound, measuring 46 ten 32
space 118, 119 decimal system 28, 31
space flight 118, 119 tessellation 73 W
US Space Program tetrahedron 33, 78, 81, 82, 84 Walsingham, Francis 107
118, 119 3-D shapes 23, 78–83 water bomb 83
spatial skills 11 thunderstorms 45 web, spider’s 73
spheres 79 tiling 73 Wiles, Andrew 16
spirals 51 time 94–95
square numbers 36 time zones 94–95
square root 20 Torino scale 46
tornadoes, measuring 47
Z
squares 71, 72, 75 zero 20, 30–31
logical 104 torus 81 probability of 100
magic 54–55 trapezium 72
squaring 39 triangles 32, 70–71, 74
standard units 42 Pascal’s triangle 52–53
starfish 73 Penrose triangle 90
string theory 117 triangular numbers 37
substitution cipher 108 Turing, Alan 110–111
Sudoku 56
Sujiko 57
sun 44, 45, 79, 99 U
supercomputers 117 UNIVAC I 98
superstitions 62–63 Universe 61, 116–117
symmetry 73 unlucky numbers 62–63

Acknowledgments
DK would like to thank: Corporation: (cl) 18 Science Photo Science Photo Library: John Clegg (cr) All other images © Dorling Kindersley
Additional editors: Carron Brown, Library: (bc). 20 Alamy Stock Photo: 77 Getty Images: Carlos Casariego (bl) For further information see:
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Ashwin Khurana Dinodia Photos (cla); NASA Image Eisenbiess (br) 84 Alamy Images: liszt
Collection (bl). 21 Alamy Stock Photo: collection (cl). TopFoto.co.uk: The
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Additional illustration: Keiran Sandal Bettmann (tl); Universal History Archive Harding World Imagery (cr). Getty
Jacket: Saloni Singh, Priyanka Sharma (clb); Mondadori Portfolio / Hulton Fine Images: (clb) 88 Getty Images: Juergen
Art Collection (clb). 32 Corbis: Araldo Richter (tr). Science Photo Library: (bl)89
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Americanization: John Searcy
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The publisher would like to thank the
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following for their kind permission to
Images (cr) 41 Getty Images: Time & Library: Hagley Museum And Archive
reproduce their photographs:
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Photo Library: Professor Peter Goddard
Alamy Images: Mary Evans Picture (bc,cl). 119 Alamy Stock Photo: Abaca
(crb). TopFoto.co.uk: The Granger
Library (bl) 73 Corbis: Jonn / Jonnér Press / Olivier Douliery (br).
Collection (tl) 17 Corbis: Imaginechina
Images (c). Getty Images: John W. Getty Images: Smith Collection /
(tr). Image originally created by IBM
Banagan (cra); Christopher Robbins (tr). Gado / Contributor / Archive Photos

128

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