top of page

How Imaginary Numbers Were Invented


Ela Nur Halil

 

Luca Pacioli, Leonardo da Vinci’s math teacher published Summa de Arithmetica in 1494. It consisted of all math known in Renaissance Italy. One chapter was devoted to the cubic equation. Pacioli came to the conclusion that solving it was impossible.

Learn More

1030_SS_imaginary_numbers_feat.jpeg

Why You Should Never Play the Roulette in a

Casino



Poyraz Ali Güner

 

Rules of Roulette:
Choose a number, any number. Heck, choose as many numbers as you want! This is the main premise of a traditional roulette table if it were to be told to a 5-year-old. 

Learn More

Screen Shot 2023-11-29 at 23.09.18.png

The Math Behind Artificial Intelligence


Doruk Alp Uzunarslan
artificial-intelligence-medical-news-july-2022-2.jpeg

 

Do you ever realize how often you use the assistance of artificial intelligence? In daily life, especially for younger generations, people tend to visit various websites throughout the day. Either knowingly or unaware, artificial intelligence (AI) system algorithms guide its clients. Those algorithms mostly depend on some math functions. So let’s dive deeper about those. 

Learn More


Knight's Tour Problem - The Adventure of a Knight


Derin Değerli

 

In the intricate art of mind games, there exists an extraordinary dance between chess and mathematics. The strategic scheme behind chess consists of numerous math phenomena, including geometry, game theory, optimization, statistics, and number theory. There is one particular intriguing problem that piqued my interest regarding the relationship between chess and mathematics: the knight’s tour problem. The knight’s tour problem is an old puzzle where the knight makes legal moves on a classical chessboard (8x8) to visit every tile exactly once in one rotation. The animated model below offers a visual demonstration of this problem.

Learn More


The Math Behind Neural Networks

Hüseyin Eren Arslan
neural.webp

 

For the past decade, artificial intelligence has become a huge part of our lives. Even if we do not use it directly in our daily lives, it is used to analyze, extract, and come up with its own decisions. But what does artificial intelligence exactly do, how does a machine learn just from a sample of data? It basically uses certain mathematical functions to extract data and come up with either a decision or a value. In this article I will focus on the concept of Neural Networks, Convolutional Neural Networks and the mathematical functions used.

Learn More


Can Incompleteness Complete Mathematics I: The

theory and how Gödel proved it


Erdem Akder
Godel-Tower_2880x1620_Lede.jpeg

 

This is the first part of the article about Gödel’s theory of incompleteness. This part will delve into the theory and the methodology that Gödel followed to demonstrate that mathematics is incomplete. The second part will concentrate on the implication of the theory and its relationship with epistemology and physics.

Learn More


The Mystery of Infinities

Emir Alikalfa
zero-infinity-img.jpeg

 

In the mysterious realm of mathematics some concepts ,such as infinity, catch people's attention and make people wonder about itself. Georg Cantor was just one of many mathematicians who were intrigued about the term “infinity”. But, what actually is infinity? 

Learn More

Articles From Last Years
Math and Earthquakes

Ceyda Toprak

 

Do you know the relation between earthquakes and math? If you would like to know, let’s learn together.

Learn More

deprem.jpeg
Infinity Minus Infinity
Seden Nalbant

Any number subtracted from itself is equal to zero. Therefore, you might think that infinity minus infinity is also equal to zero; however, this is not true. Let’s find out the answer together.

Learn More

infinity.jpeg
Why is 0! Equal to 1?
Özdoğan Çağrı Dirik

First of all, let’s define factorial. Factorial is a function of any natural number that multiplies all the counting numbers less than or equal to itself. The factorial of the number “n” is represented as n! and it is equal to the following expression:

Learn More

Screen Shot 2023-01-16 at 20.39.44.png
Screen Shot 2022-02-18 at 21.05.26.png

Before delving into calculus of variations, let’s look at a more familiar topic. How would you find the local minimum in a function f(x)?

 

First, you would derive         and then equalize         to 0. Then, finding the values of x satisfying this equation would be candidates for local min. As the solutions of        = 0  leads to the stationary points, further testing allows the determination of the nature of these points. In this problem, we are concerned with the single variable differential calculus. 

 

Learn More

CodeCogsEqn - 2022-02-18T212057.704.gif
CodeCogsEqn - 2022-02-18T212225.595.gif
CodeCogsEqn - 2022-02-18T212057.704.gif

Magic Squares
Poyraz Ali Güner

Screen Shot 2021-10-15 at 22.06.52.png

Figure 1: A Magical 3x3 Square

Imagine waking up in a room, finding a plane with a 3x3 grid painted on it, balanced on a little marble with 45 cubes next to it. To get out, you must arrange the cubes in such an order that the sums of blocks in every line, colon, and diagonal in the grid should exactly be the same, causing the plane to be in balance.

Learn More

Gabriel's Horn
Ezel Göktaş, Recai Efe Sunay

Screen Shot 2021-07-11 at 23.38.50.png

Figure 1: Gabriel's Horn

In this article, the underlying mathematical understanding of “Gabriel's Horn” is evaluated. According to some religious beliefs, Gabriel is supposed to blow his horn and announce Judgment Day when it comes. However, there is a notion that is unique and peculiar about the understanding of his horn when it is approached as a geometric figure.

Learn More

 

Screen Shot 2021-06-23 at 21.38.22.png

Figure 1: Binary operation       combines x and y

CodeCogsEqn - 2021-06-24T222559.905.gif

The word “binary” means consisting of two pieces and a binary operation is a rule for merging two values to obtain a new value. The operations such as addition and multiplication that we all learned in elementary school are actually the most common binary operations.

 

In order to understand binary operations, we first need to look at the definition of a mapping which is very similar to a function.

Learn More

Matryoshka
Ece Paksoy

Let’s choose a number - for example 7. Then square that number -  which gives us 49 in our case. Then square the resulting number and continue until we find a repeating point or a boundary. Unfortunately, if you have chosen a number bigger than 1, you would have seen how quickly it started to increase without any limits. However, if you have chosen a number between 0 and 1, like     , the number becomes smaller and smaller and remains in a bounded place. But if we had chosen a negative number like -5, it would have also blown up and would have gone to infinity. So, which numbers do stay in place and remain in a bounded area when we constantly square the ending result?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Learn More

CodeCogsEqn - 2021-05-27T220136.234.gif
Mandel_zoom_08_satellite_antenna.jpeg

Numbers are also the language of harmony. Whether in the field of painting, in architecture or in the world of sounds, people have tried to express harmony in the language of numbers. The throne of beauty in the visual field is based on a wonderful number: the golden number.

                       is one of the two roots of the equation                            .

The decimal value of this number is 1.618. Wherever people look, they want to see this number.

Learn More

CodeCogsEqn - 2021-05-01T181753.738.gif
CodeCogsEqn - 2021-05-01T181609.374.gif
goldenratio.jpeg
Screen Shot 2021-03-27 at 23.58.27.png
CodeCogsEqn (90).gif

What does it mean to find a derivative of a function at a certain value? It means finding the slope of the line that is tangent to the function, or rate of change, at that point. What does it mean to find the second derivative of a function at a certain value? It means finding the rate of change of its slope, or the curvature, at that point. Here is the tricky question: How do we find the     nd derivative of a particular function? What does it even mean to perform such a calculation? Well, it means very little. It means something very rarely, like, maybe if we are dealing with very complicated fractals, it can mean something then. Other than that, it is just fun to think about, which is the motivation behind this article. 

Learn More

Screen Shot 2021-02-22 at 23.43.11.png

Logistic Curves

So we were saying that the epidemic does not continuously grow at the exponential rate, yet it slows down and thus concaves down after the inflection point, which is where the shape changes from concaving up to down. Since the analysis of COVID-19 worldwide leads to logistic growth eventually, let’s further investigate logistic curves. The formula of a logistic curve would be...

Learn More

In physics, to find how a pendulum behaves the equation T(1 - cosx) - x being the angle between the equilibrium position and the rod, and T being the length of the string- is used. However, to help the students solve problems without their calculators, their teacher shows them another equation that looks like        and substitutes cosx with           . When we plot both functions, they do resemble each other for small angles near zero but how can we even think to find these approximations? 

 

 

 

 

Learn More

Screen Shot 2020-12-26 at 22.16.43.png
CodeCogsEqn.gif
CodeCogsEqn (1).gif

© 2021 by Math Club. 

bottom of page