Mathematics manuscript materials
Making mathematics manuscripts can not only improve students’ knowledge. At the same time, it is also a way to activate the classroom atmosphere. Below I have carefully compiled the mathematics handwritten newspaper materials for everyone. You are welcome to read and study! Mathematics handwritten newspaper materials: Quotes from mathematicians
1) Mathematics Some of the beautiful theorems in have this characteristic: they are easy to be summarized from the facts, but the proofs are extremely hidden. Mathematics is the king of science. ?Gaussian
2) The numbers in late sequence are not miraculous, they are tangible and detectable, and they can be deduced numerically. ?Zu Chongzhi
3) Mathematics? The unshakable cornerstone of science, a rich source of promoting the progress of human undertakings Barrow
4) We must know, we must will know. ?Hilbert
5) A scholar, in addition to learning knowledge, must also have taste. This word is not easy to translate, and some translate it into taste and love. If a person wants to achieve great achievements, he must have a very clear taste. ?Zhenning Yang
6) If anyone does not know that the diagonals of a square and the same side are incommensurable quantities, then he is not worthy of the title of human being. ?Plato
7) After considering those few things, the whole thing boils down to pure geometry, which is an aim of physics and mechanics Leibniz
8) We must dare to do subtraction in learning, that is, subtracting the parts that have been solved by predecessors to see what problems are still unresolved and we need to explore and solve Hua Luogeng
9 ) In mathematics, the art of asking questions is more important than the art of answering them. ?Kang Mu'er
10) Time is a constant, but for those who are diligent, it is a "variable". People who use "minutes" to calculate time have 59 times more time than people who use "hours" to calculate time. Rybakov
Material content of mathematics handwritten newspaper: The story of a mathematician
< p> The reclusive genius mathematicianHe may be the smartest person in the world and has solved one of the seven thousand-year problems in mathematics. He is also an enigmatic hermit. Treat money, reputation and status as dirt. Mathematics was all he had. He is the 40-year-old Russian mathematician Grigory Perelman.
The Fields Medal, known as the Nobel Prize in Mathematics, will be announced on August 22 in Madrid, Spain. According to an online news report from Nature magazine: The Fields Medal will be awarded this year in Madrid, Spain. The winner is Perelman who cracked the Poincaré Conjecture. There are only five days left until the award ceremony, but the International Congress of Mathematicians still has not received a reply whether Perelman will attend. The scientific community generally believes that he is likely to reject this award and the $1 million bonus. But this wasn't surprising 10 years ago. He once refused the Outstanding Young Mathematician Award awarded to him by the European Mathematical Association.
In 1905, Frenchman Henri Poincaré proposed a famous conjecture: In a three-dimensional space, if a closed curve can shrink to a point, then the space must be a three-dimensional sphere. This is the Poincaré Conjecture, which has had an important impact on using mathematical language to describe the shape of the universe. Six years ago, the Clay Institute of the United States listed it as one of the "Seven Millennium Puzzles", with a prize of 530,000 pounds for each puzzle solved. Three Americans have partially cracked this conjecture, and all won the Fields Medal for this. Perelman's contribution was that he provided a complete framework for finally solving this conjecture. But Perelman has made it clear long ago that he is not interested in this bonus at all.
During the 10 years he studied the Poincaré Conjecture in St. Petersburg, Perelman lived an almost isolated life. He does not give lectures or submit articles to scientific magazines. Refuse to talk to the media. Even interviews with prestigious magazines like Nature and Science. He also dismissed it. It is said that he used to use e-mail to answer math questions, but later he developed a hatred for this non-face-to-face communication method.
He put several important papers on cracking the Poincaré Conjecture in a mathematical literature library on the Internet. I simply wrote one sentence: That’s it.
Arthur Jaffe of Harvard University commented on this: Perelman hates showing off and worshiping individuals. He took this to the extreme and even made people think he was a little crazy. Professor Toussaint Torre of Oxford University said: Perelman is quite alienated from the mathematical community and he is not interested in money. For him, the highest reward was proving his theorem. ?