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The Square Root of Two to One Million Digits

David E McAdams

$28.95   $25.73

Paperback

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English
Life Is a Story Problem LLC
09 June 2023
A conundrum faced ancient mathematicians. Which number to use for the square root of 2? Ancient Babylonians used the fraction 305470/216000. This was accurate to about six decimal places. Ancient Indians used the fraction 577/408. This fraction is accurate to five decimal places. Today, mathematicians understand that the square root of 2 is irrational, its digits go on forever without repeating. It is calculated using an infinite series. This book lists the first million digits of the square root of 2.

By:  
Imprint:   Life Is a Story Problem LLC
Volume:   20
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   345g
ISBN:   9781632703651
ISBN 10:   1632703653
Series:   Math Books for Children
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

"After 30 years of software development, David McAdams was looking for something new to do. He turned his attention to math instruction. Through his coursework at Utah Valley University, he learned how critical vocabulary acquisition is to all learning, and especially to math. Math has long been regarded as its having its own language, with its own syntax and symbols. The acquisition of this language has been found to be a barrier to many students.Aftaer the completion of his internship, Mr. McAdams finished compiling vocabulary words into a comprehensive dictionary, written for middle school and high school students. ""All Math Words Dictionary"" is the culmination of eight years work collecting, classifying and describing all of the words a student might encounter in their studies of algebra, geometry, and calculus. This book has over 3000 entries; more than 140 notations defined; in excess of 790 illustrations; an IPA pronunciation guide; and greater than 1400 formulas and equations.While working on the dictionary, between playing with his grandchildren, Mr. McAdams started developing other ideas for math literacy. The results are ""Numbers"", ""What is Bigger than Anything (Infinity)"", ""Swing Sets (Set Theory)"", and ""Learning with Play Money"".Branching out, Mr. McAdams took a departure from teaching tools into the arena of pure mathematical delight. This results in two volumes of ""My Favorite Fractals"".While reading a book on colors to his grandson Sawyer, got to thinking how boring books are colors are for adults. ""What in the natural world,"" he mused, ""has enough of the primary and secondary colors to teach colors to children?"" His answer was either frogs or parrots. He created ""Parrot Colors"", ""Flower Colors"", and ""Space Colors"".Returning to math, Mr. McAdams remembered how, in his youth, he found a few printouts of geometric nets and was fascinated how they folded together into complex, 3-dimensional objects. He prepared ""Geometric Nets Project Book, then ""Geometric Nets Mega Project Book."

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