The Miura Fold

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Miura-Ori_CP.svg
Image: Wikimedia Commons

In 1980, Japanese astrophysicist Kōryō Miura worked out a pattern of parallelograms that permit a map to be folded much more compactly than conventional right-angle creases. So efficient is the pattern that a map can be opened or refolded with a single motion by pulling on opposite ends, rather like an accordion. Today it’s used to fold surgical devices, furniture, and solar panel arrays on spacecraft.

Quick Thinking

During lunch one day at Los Alamos, Richard Feynman told his colleagues, “I can work out in sixty seconds the answer to any problem that anybody can state in ten seconds, to 10 percent!”

He had completed several challenges when mathematician Paul Olum walked past.

‘Hey, Paul!’ they call out. ‘Feynman’s terrific! We give him a problem that can be stated in ten seconds, and in a minute he gets the answer to 10 percent. Why don’t you give him one?’

Without hardly stopping, he says, ‘The tangent of 10 to the 100th.’

“I was sunk: you have to divide by pi to 100 decimal places! It was hopeless. … He was a very smart fellow.”

(From Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman!, 1985.)

Otherwise Stated

Another exercise in linguistic purism: In his 1989 essay “Uncleftish Beholding,” Poul Anderson tries to explain atomic theory using Germanic words almost exclusively, coining terms of his own as needed:

The firststuffs have their being as motes called unclefts. These are mightly small; one seedweight of waterstuff holds a tale of them like unto two followed by twenty-two naughts. Most unclefts link together to make what are called bulkbits. Thus, the waterstuff bulkbit bestands of two waterstuff unclefts, the sourstuff bulkbit of two sourstuff unclefts, and so on. (Some kinds, such as sunstuff, keep alone; others, such as iron, cling together in ices when in the fast standing; and there are yet more yokeways.) When unlike clefts link in a bulkbit, they make bindings. Thus, water is a binding of two waterstuff unclefts with one sourstuff uncleft, while a bulkbit of one of the forestuffs making up flesh may have a thousand thousand or more unclefts of these two firststuffs together with coalstuff and chokestuff.

Reader Justin Hilyard, who let me know about this, adds, “This sort of not-quite-conlang is still indulged in now and then today; it’s often known as ‘Anglish’, after a coining by British humorist Paul Jennings in 1966, in a three-part series in Punch magazine celebrating the 900th anniversary of the Norman conquest. He also wrote some passages directly inspired by William Barnes in that same Germanic-only style.”

Somewhat related: In 1936 Buckminster Fuller explained Einstein’s theory of relativity in a 264-word telegram.

(Thanks, Justin.)

Saving Time

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Recursive_maze.gif
Image: Wikimedia Commons

Above: A valid maze can be generated recursively by dividing an open chamber with walls and creating an opening at random within each wall, ensuring that a route can be found through the chamber. The secondary chambers themselves can then be divided with further walls, following the same principle, to any level of complexity.

Below: Valid mazes can even be generated fractally — here a solution becomes available in the third panel, but an unlucky solver might wander forever in the depths of self-similarity at the center of the image.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wolfram_fractal_maze.svg
Image: Wikimedia Commons

The Bride’s Chair

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Illustration_to_Euclid%27s_proof_of_the_Pythagorean_theorem2.svg

This is Euclid’s proof of the Pythagorean theorem — Schopenhauer called it a “brilliant piece of perversity” for its needless complexity:

  1. Erect a square on each leg of a right triangle. From the triangle’s right angle, A, draw a line parallel to BD and CE. This will intersect BC and DE perpendicularly at K and L.
  2. Draw segments CF and AD, forming triangles BCF and BDA.
  3. Because angles CAB and BAG are both right angles, C, A, and G are collinear.
  4. Because angles CBD and FBA are both right angles, angle ABD equals angle FBC, since each is the sum of a right angle and angle ABC.
  5. Since AB is equal to FB, BD is equal to BC, and angle ABD equals angle FBC, triangle ABD is congruent to triangle FBC.
  6. Since A-K-L is a straight line that’s parallel to BD, rectangle BDLK has twice the area of triangle ABD, because they share base BD and have the same altitude, BK, a line perpendicular to their common base and connecting parallel lines BD and AL.
  7. By similar reasoning, since C is collinear with A and G, and this line is parallel to FB, square BAGF must be twice the area of triangle FBC.
  8. Therefore, rectangle BDLK has the same area as square BAGF, AB2.
  9. By applying the same reasoning to the other side of the figure, it can be shown that rectangle CKLE has the same area as square ACIH, AC2.
  10. Adding these two results, we get AB2 + AC2 = BD × BK + KL × KC.
  11. Since BD = KL, BD × BK + KL × KC = BD(BK + KC) = BD × BC.
  12. Therefore, since CBDE is a square, AB2 + AC2 = BC2.

The diagram became known as the bride’s chair due to a confusion in translation between Greek and Arabic.

Persistence

Each of the first 18 multiples of 526315789473684210 contains all 10 digits:

526315789473684210 x  1 =  526315789473684210
526315789473684210 x  2 = 1052631578947368420
526315789473684210 x  3 = 1578947368421052630
526315789473684210 x  4 = 2105263157894736840
526315789473684210 x  5 = 2631578947368421050
526315789473684210 x  6 = 3157894736842105260
526315789473684210 x  7 = 3684210526315789470
526315789473684210 x  8 = 4210526315789473680
526315789473684210 x  9 = 4736842105263157890
526315789473684210 x 10 = 5263157894736842100
526315789473684210 x 11 = 5789473684210526310
526315789473684210 x 12 = 6315789473684210520
526315789473684210 x 13 = 6842105263157894730
526315789473684210 x 14 = 7368421052631578940
526315789473684210 x 15 = 7894736842105263150
526315789473684210 x 16 = 8421052631578947360
526315789473684210 x 17 = 8947368421052631570
526315789473684210 x 18 = 9473684210526315780

The 19th multiple, alas, is 9999999999999999990.

Footwork

Conclusion of a 2021 investigation by physicist Eve Armstrong of her cat’s reactions to a laser pointer:

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fffscinating and merits further investigation.

(Eve Armstrong, “My Cat Chester’s Dynamical Systems Analysyyyyy7777777777777777y7is of the Laser Pointer and the Red Dot on the Wall: Correlation, Causation, or SARS-Cov-2 Hallucination?”, arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.17058 [2021].)

Learning

“Good tests kill flawed theories; we remain alive to guess again.” — Karl Popper

“There are two possible outcomes: if the result confirms the hypothesis, then you’ve made a measurement. If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you’ve made a discovery.” — Enrico Fermi

“This particular thesis was addressed to me a quarter of a century ago by John Campbell, who … told me that all theories are proven wrong in time. … My answer to him was, ‘John, when people thought the Earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the Earth was [perfectly] spherical, they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the Earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the Earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together.’ The basic trouble, you see, is that people think that ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ are absolute; that everything that isn’t perfectly and completely right is totally and equally wrong. However, I don’t think that’s so. It seems to me that right and wrong are fuzzy concepts.” — Isaac Asimov, The Relativity of Wrong, 1988