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Martin Gardner in the twenty-first century PDF

312 Pages·2012·4.64 MB·English
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MAA-Gardner cover v7POD_Layout 1 11/19/12 4:10 PM Page 1 Martin Gardner Martin Gardner in the Twenty-First Century in the Twenty-First Century Michael Henle and Brian Hopkins, Editors Michael Henle and Brian Hopkins, Editors M a r t i Martin Gardner enormously expanded the field of n G recreational mathematics with the Mathematical Games a r d n columns he wrote for Scientific Americanfor over 25 years e r and the more than 70 books he published. He also had in t h a long relationship with the Mathematical Association e T w of America, publishing articles in the MAA journals e n t y - right up to his death in 2010. This book collects articles F ir s t Gardner wrote for the MAA in the twenty-first century, C e n together with other articles the MAA published from tu r y 1999 to 2012 that spring from and comment on his work. BM riaic nh Hae D 4 G A G opl H D ke 0 insnle G 1 , E a v1 vh vi vj vn ditorsnd E EF F 1 or 3 E B 128.57o 2.247 F G G F 802 1. ISBN: 978-0-88386-913-1 2 F 1 D 2 D 102.86o E E C 9 780883 859131 1 D i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page i — #1 i i Martin Gardner in the Twenty-First Century i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 13:32 — page ii — #2 i i c 2012bytheMathematicalAssociationofAmerica,Inc. (cid:13) LibraryofCongressCatalogCardNumber2012954077 PrinteditionISBN:978-0-88385-913-1 ElectroniceditionISBN:978-1-61444-801-3 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica CurrentPrinting(lastdigit): 10987654321 i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page iii — #3 i i Martin Gardner in the Twenty-First Century edited by Michael Henle Oberlin College and Brian Hopkins Saint Peter’s University PublishedandDistributedby TheMathematicalAssociationofAmerica i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page iv — #4 i i i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page v — #5 i i Preface MartinGardnerandtheMAAsharealonghistory.In1958,aroundthetimehestartedhis famous “Mathematical Games” column forScientificAmerican, he submittedthefirst of many problems to The American MathematicalMonthly. In 1982, as his column wound down, Gardner’s first MAA article was publishedinThe Two Year CollegeMathematics Journal.He wroteforMAAjournalstherest ofhislife, particularlyThe CollegeMathe- maticsJournalandMathHorizons.Gardnercontributedtothelatteralmostannuallyfrom itsfoundingin1993until2005. Gardner’sprodigiouswritingactivitycontinuedrightuntilhisdeathin2010.Articles, stories,problems,solutions,Quickies,andotherkindsofcontributionscontinuedtoflow. HislastmathematicalarticletoappearinanMAAjournal,“L-trominoTilingofMutilated Chessboards,” was the centerpiece of a special puzzle issue ofThe CollegeMathematics Journalin2009,anditisincludedhere. Earlyin2010,MathHorizonseditorsSteveAbbottandBruceTorrenceweresurprised toreceive atypescriptmanuscript.Gardnerused atypewriterhiswholelife,never email. Thesubmissionwasaccompaniedbyanote,“Isthisshortstorysomethingyoucanuse?I wrotethemathcolumninScientificAmericanfor25years.IfmypieceisnotrightforMath Horizons,there isnoneed tosend itback. Allbest,Martin.” There was notenoughtime for the editorsto thank Martinfor his submission[6]. Fittingly,thisstory, “Superstrings andThelma,”isthelastpieceinthiscollection. Apartfromhisownwork,MartinGardner,byenormouslyexpandingthefieldofrecre- ational mathematics, opened up vast mathematical tracts for exploration by others. This was quitedeliberate. In an interview in The Two-Year College MathematicsJournal [1], Gardnersaid,“I’mdefining[recreationalmathematics]intheverybroadsensetoinclude anything that has a spirit of play about it.” Gardner, of course, had a refined and very well-developed sense of play, one quality that made his pieces so enjoyable to read. In almost everything he wrote, Gardner posed problems to challenge his readers, and they responded.Hemaintainedanextensivecorrespondencewithmathematicians,bothprofes- sionalandamateur.Theirworkfueledhisownpieces, butthenhiscorrespondentsturned aroundandwrotetheirownarticles. Oneconsequencewastheexpansionofrecreationalmathematicsintoamajorresearch area(alsohelpedbythedevelopmentofthecomputerandthecorrespondingexpandedin- terestindiscretemathematics)thatissuchafeatureofthecurrentmathematicallandscape. TheCMJdevotedtheJanuary2012issuetopapersontopicsthatGardnerintroducedtothe mathematical public.There were somany articlestoincludethathalfoftheMarch2012 issuecontinuedthetheme. v i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page vi — #6 i i vi Preface Anotherconsequenceofthefloweringofrecreationalmathematicsisthisvolume.We havecollectedMAAjournalarticlesstartingfrom1999ontopicsthatGardnerdeveloped. SomearewrittenbyGardner,butmostarebyothers.ThetributearticlesfromtheJanuary andMarch2012CMJissuesareallhere,buttheyconstitutelessthanhalfofthiscollection. AlltheMAAjournalsarerepresented,MathematicsMagazineandtheMonthly,aswellas CMJ and Math Horizons. The limitationto pieces published roughly in the twenty-first centuryisapracticalone.Evenso,somepuzzlecollections,longerarticles,andpiecesless directlylinkedtoMartinGardnerhavebeenomitted. The 41pieces collectedhere are groupedaroundcommon themes, such as geometry, numbertheoryandgraphtheory,andcards andprobability.Flexagons,thetopicofGard- ner’sfirstScientificAmericancolumn,areseentobeassociatedwithCatalannumbersand together merit their own section. Geometric tiling and various “magic” number puzzles are all about“Making Things Fit,” and there are enough other puzzles and games to fill anothersection. Gardner’s interests ranged far beyond mathematics. A fan of magicians and magic tricksfromchildhood(“Iwastealotoftimeonit”[2]),hewroteseveralbooksonmagic. HeannotatedLewis Carroll’sAlicebooksandotherclassics, andproducedtwonovelsof hisown.Othertopicsincludedphilosophy,religion,literatureandpseudo-science,leading tosome70books. The lastsectionofthisvolumehighlightssome ofthese otherfacets ofMartinGard- ner’s wide-ranging interests. It includes two short stories by Gardner and several other piecesthatdemonstratehissupportforamateurmathematicians,hisloveofplay(aboutan AprilFool’sjokeheplayedonhisScientificAmericanreaders),andhisinterestindebunk- ingfalsescience.AlsoincludedisGardner’sreviewofa2004novelinwhichanimportant characterseemstobebasedonhim. Our hope is that this volume will play a role in perpetuating the memory of Martin Gardner, modest celebrity, larger-than-life character, self-confessed amateur as a mathe- matician, popularizerofrecreationalmathematics inthe broadestsense, prolificandbril- liantwriter.Giventhelastingimpressionhe made onseveral generationsofmathematics enthusiastsofallbackgrounds,weareconfidentthattheMAAandotherswillbepublish- ingarticlesinspiredbyGardner’sworkforalongtime. Gardner, likethereaders ofthisbook,lovedmathematics. We closethispreface with Gardner’sownwordsonhisbackground,thecommunity,andwhyheenjoyedthefieldso much(from[5],[4],and[3],respectively). Itooknomathincollege.I’mlikeapersonwholovesmusicbutcan’thum a tuneorplayan instrument.Myunderstandingofmathdoes notgobeyond a minimalunderstandingofcalculus. I hasten toaddthatI considerthisone reasonforthesuccess ofmyScientificAmerican column.Ihadtoworkhard tounderstandwhateverIwroteabout,andthismadeitmucheasierformeto writeinawaythatreaderscouldunderstand. When I first startedthe column, I was not intouch withany mathemati- cians,andgraduallymathematicianswhowerecreativeinthefieldfoundout aboutthecolumnand begancorrespondingwithme. Somymostinteresting columnswerecolumnsbasedonmaterialthatIgotfromthem,soIowethem abigdebtofgratitude. i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page vii — #7 i i Preface vii [I enjoy mathematics] because it has a strange kind of unearthlybeauty. Thereisastrongfeelingofpleasure,hardtodescribe,inthinkingthroughan elegantproof,andevengreaterpleasureindiscoveringaproofnotpreviously known. Aclnowledgments The editors are grateful for the encouragement and hard work of the MAA publications staff:Directorof PublicationsIvars Peterson, who conceived the book,ProductionMan- agerCarolBaxter,whodesignedit,andespeciallyElectronicPublicationManagerBeverly JoyRuedi,whosetthebookintype. Bibliography [1] AnthonyBarcellosandMartinGardner,AConversationwithMartinGardner,Two-YearCollege Math.J.10(1979)233–244. [2] DonAlbersandMartinGardner,OntheWayto“MathematicalGames”:PartIofanInterview withMartinGardner,CollegeMath.J.36,(2005)178–190. [3] DonAlbers andMartin Gardner,“MathematicalGames”andBeyond:Part II of anInterview withMartinGardner,CollegeMath.J.36(2005)301–314. [4] Colm MulcahyandMartin Gardner,An Interview with Martin Gardner,CardColm, October 2006,availableatwww.maa.org/columns/colm/cardcolm200610.html [5] MichaelHenleandMartinGardner,InterviewwithMartinGardner,CollegeMath.J.40(2009) 158–161. [6] BruceTorrenceandStephenAbbott,ToOurReaders,MathHorizons18(2010)2–4. i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page viii — #8 i i i i i i i i “master” — 2012/11/15 — 11:23 — page ix — #9 i i Contents Preface v I Geometry 1 1 TheAsymmetricPropeller 3 MartinGardner Gardner,payingtributetodentistandgeometerLeonBankoff,discussessomeofhisunpub- lishedresultsandconcludeswithanopenquestion. 2 TheAsymmetricPropellerRevisited 7 GillianSaenz,ChristopherJackson,andRyanCrumley ThreeUniversityofTexasstudentsusedynamicgeometrysoftwaretoconfirmBankoff’sre- sultsandresolveGardner’squestion. 3 BracingRegularPolygonsAsWeRaceintotheFuture 11 GregW.Frederickson AproblemGardnerpublishedin1963continuestospurgeneralizationsandimprovedsolu- tionsaroundtheworld. 4 APlatonicSextetforStrings 19 KarlSchaffer Theprofessoranddancecompanyco-directordetailsstring polyhedraconstructionsfor ten participants. 5 PrinceRupert’sRectangles 25 RichardP.JerrardandJohnE.Wetzel A17thcenturypuzzlethatGardnerposedinhigherdimensionsisheresolvedinthecaseof three-dimensionalboxes. II NumberTheory andGraphTheory 35 6 TranscendentalsandEarlyBirds 37 MartinGardner GardnermovesfromLiouvilletoan“innocentbuttotallyuselessamusement”thatnonetheless capturedtheattentionofSolomonGolomb. 7 Squaring,Cubing,andCubeRooting 39 ArthurT.Benjamin Theprofessorand“mathemagician,”inspiredasahighschoolstudentbyGardner’stricksfor mentalcalculations,extendssomeofthemhere. ix i i i i

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Martin Gardner enormously expanded the field of recreational mathematics with the Mathematical Games columns he wrote for Scientific American for over 25 years and the more than 70 books he published. He also had a long relationship with the Mathematical Association of America, publishing articles i
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