350-Year-Old Newton's Puzzle Solved By 16-Year-Old
First time accepted submitter johnsnails writes "A German 16-year-old, Shouryya Ray, solved two fundamental particle dynamic theories posed by Sir Isaac Newton, which until recently required the use of powerful computers. He worked out how to calculate exactly the path of a projectile under gravity and subject to air resistance. Shouryya solved the problem while working on a school project. From the article: 'Mr Ray won a research award for his efforts and has been labeled a genius by the German media, but he put it down to "curiosity and schoolboy naivety." "When it was explained to us that the problems had no solutions, I thought to myself, 'well, there's no harm in trying,'" he said.'"
We all had that moment in school when a teacher would pose an "impossible" problem, thought to ourselves "Well, they've never faced ME before!", spent a few minutes toying with it and finally giving up. This kid...did not.
Kudos all around! The rest of your life will, unfortunately, now no longer live up to something you accomplished when you were 16.
Can someone who worked with geniuses and child prodigies before explain to me how their brains allow for learning calculus at 6?
Arithmetic at 1-2, Algebra at 3-4, basics of Calc at 5-6? What's the progression? It's not that I don't believe the guy, it's just that that is a rather large volume of information to pack into life, when there are basic skills like toilet training and such. I'm having a tough time imagining the time scale.
Now, if he said calculus by 10-11, I'd believe that. In the US, from K-12, almost all of it is repetition where you learn to add and subtract for the first month of every school year for some reason. If they cut out the crap for the smart kids, I could easily see calculus by 12 for competent kids. But 6? It seems difficult.
The article itself is mathless. It doesn't tell you what the solution was, or even present the exact problem that was solved.
I did not know that the two problems described were unsolved. I thought that "how to calculate exactly the path of a projectile under gravity and subject to air resistance" was already figured out. I guess "exact path" is the trick here. An the other about an "object striking a wall"...
Should make for even better gaming physics...
"There’s nothing wrong with that, but that’s all he did. He loved solving problems, he loved coming up with the answers. But, he thought that the answers were the answer for everything. Wrong. All Science no Philosophy. So then one day someone tells him that the stuff he’s making was killing people."
Can anyone actually find the problems in question somewhere? I've been scouring Google and the whole thing is very vague -- no story really goes into depth about the actual problem he solved and how.
His surname is Ray not Ra!! But to be honest he has solved this problem because he was in Germany, if he stayed in India he would have been normal!
German media praise math geniuses, while american media praise hollywood actors/actresses (read: human rubbish) and reality show weirdos. In the US a "genius" is someone who makes millions, especially with lower education and without being able to do anything. That's "free market economy", and "supply and demand", right?
"The land of the free and of the brave" (with some fat on the belly).
His name is Shouryya Ray.
"which until recently required the use of powerful computers"
Sound like NP. If they are, and if the boy's solution is deterministic, it will be huge.
I know there's a solution for linear air resistance, so I can only imagine this is a solution for air resistance that has some other velocity relationship
...go to the source! The German articles I've scoured seem to have a little more information about the problem itself and what he actually accomplished. The oldest one only records that he "claims" to have solved them (earlier this month), but so far no actual data. Close.
http://www.enso-blog.de/jugend-forscht-drei-arbeiten-aus-ostsachsen-beim-bundeswettbewerb
http://www.morgenpost.de/vermischtes/article106358144/16-jaehriger-Schueler-loest-uraltes-Mathe-Problem.html
So basic grammar is used to emphasize his origin? Really?
Due to the lack of specifics, just seems to be an article where a dad is bragging about his son, I'll reserve belief that Mr. Ra has solved anything until I see a published solution in a mathematics journal. Given the sheer number of ballistic weapons used by the US and other armies since the initial World War, I kinda doubt that there is a new solution to this problem of predicting where a shell would fall.
Man, he just went home and popped up Wolfram Alpha, what's with all the fuss?
For god's sake don't let him work for the military, who are probably reaching out to him now.
http://jugend-forscht-sachsen.de/2012/teilnehmer/fachgebiet/id/5
Text is in German. It all stems from a Youth Research competition he entered into back in March of this year. This is, so far, the best summary I've found -- there is a paper, apparently, but no link just yet.
'Two problems in classical mechanics have withstood several centuries of mathematical endeavor. The first problem is therefore to calculate the trajectory of a body thrown at an angle in the Earth's gravitational field and Newtonian flow resistance. The underlying power law was discovered by Newton (17th century). The second problem is the objective description of a particle-wall collision under Hertzian collision force and linear damping. The collision energy was derived in 1858 by Hertz, a linear damping force has Stokes (1850) is known. This paper has so far only the analytical solution of this approximate or numerical targets for the problems solved. First, the two problems are solved fully analytically. For the first problem will be investigated further using the analytical solution, the physical behavior of the system and set up outline solutions for generalized models. For the second problem is carried out in order to increase efficiency and convergence control a semi-analytical optimization. Finally, the analytical results are compared with numerical solutions so as to validate accuracy and convergence to numerically."
The genes for intelligence/reasoning were probably selected for in India thousands of years before Aryan immigration/invasion.
Good job there, providing zero evidence outside of hearsay and stereotyping. Because if there's one thing that will provide evidence for eugenics, it's the opinions of other people who want to provide evidence for eugenics.
Andrew Wiles solved Fermat's Last Theorm with paper only, as he despised the use of computers in writing mathematical Proofs. Another famous example is Grigori Perelman who solved the Poincaré Conjecture - with hundreds and hundreds of pages of mind-numbingly dense mathematics vs computer search.
The problem with that interpretation is that just having those groups believe that about themselves would have that effect.
Its not that desktop ornament with the steel balls on strings is it?
I thought the puzzle about Newton was why did Apple abandon it.
These stories about overwhelming acts of personal genius, especially stories that lack the details of the alleged act, are, without memorable exception, false. But we all like a good story about an under-caste upsetting gray hairs and the established order of things.
Think about that for a moment. A story supposedly lionizing science lacking the most basic facts that would permit substantial verification, or falsification, of that science. This is just flash journalism at work.
We all had that moment in school when a teacher would pose an "impossible" problem, thought to ourselves "Well, they've never faced ME before!", spent a few minutes toying with it and finally giving up. This kid...did not.
Nor did George Dantzig at UC Berkeley in 1939. Without him, Good Will Hunting would be a movie about buying a suit at a thrift store.
I also had been told, "This problem cannot be solved analytically" in school, and even propagated this myth to my students for several years. Then I found a solution in an old dynamics book. Think of it as an "urban myth" that projectile motion with air resistance cannot be solved without a computer. Still, congratulation to this kid for working on a very tough problem which he believed to be unsolvable, and sticking with it through completion. Assuming of course that he solved it!
The benefits of not having IQ-lowering Fluoride added to your water... http://www.fluoridealert.org/iq-studies.aspx
Ok, so Indians worship cows and their elite caste is named like the Fallout cows... There has to be a joke in there!
I don't think so.... Aryan maybe, but not German.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Then I found a solution in an old dynamics book
[citation needed]
really
And the submitter gave up right while copying the name of the kid from the article to slashdot.
"Shouryya Ray" became "Shouryya Ra" and samzenpus also let it through without any corrections.
The Indian-born teen said he solved the problem that had stumped mathematicians for centuries while working on a school project.
hurr durr
Did it myself years ago, but the margin was too small to hold the proof,
This longer piece (German) quotes him pointing out that he is very weak in Graph theory and Combinatorics. Nevertheless he skipped two classed in school and will be able to start university this fall.
Won't be the last time we heard form this guy.
In the summary he is first named Ra, and then later referred to as "Mr. Ray". Which one is correct?
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Hope this kid gets plenty of glory from this, because other than his hand, he's not gettin' any sex, that's for sure.
Despite whether or not this alleged problem previously had no known solution, if he did solve anything, how much did his dad help him?
My parents are not college educated and I found in grade school that none of my science projects could compete with those who had educated parents no matter how hard I tried. I would ask my parents to help me but they were mostly unable to.
Now I have younger cousins who have college educated parents and they've won/win a bunch of science projects in grade school ... but could they have done it if it weren't for the help of their parents? My younger cousins are often at the top of their class (or close) academically, etc... but mostly because both of their parents are college educated. I'm not saying anything bad about my parents, I love them to death and they're hard working, but if they don't know anything about science and I, as a young student, am competing with the very educated parents of other students, how am I supposed to win?
Yet when I was in grade school and all I was very motivated to do well at science projects, etc... I loved science. As I got older I was able to learn more stuff on my own by reading textbooks and stuff.
I think this might be a fundamental problem with our educational system at the grade school level. It often rewards students based on the educational background of their parents, those with the most educated parents do the best in science projects and get the most recognition while some who maybe smarter and more determined get nowhere because if they don't even know where to start, none of the material in those winning science projects is taught in school, they may not have had the books necessary to read up on it (or even understand it), etc...
With the internet, much of that is changing though. Any student with access to the Internet can potentially find the Khan academy and watch it, but of course, what if their parents are unfamiliar with that stuff? Very young students may have difficult finding resources at their age without the help of their parents. Perhaps the schools can do a better job of informing students of these free educational online resources at a younger age and we can find better ways to better help determined students at grade school, with uneducated parents, to do better at science projects and whatnot.
I think it's great that this guy found an analytic solution to an old problem, but it is of no practical significance. Most of the complication in ballistics arises from the complicated effects of air resistance which are not limited to simple drag. Numerical solutions will still be required for anything as simple as a golf ball if you want any accuracy at all.
I am sort of surprised that there is any news on this as the ability to predict a projectile's path would be of great interest to military units possessing large guns. You know, when you are throwing 3,000 lbs. of wicked, fierce explosive 75 miles down range it is sort of nice to hit your target rather than the convent or kindergarten a few yards away.
Journal pages or manuscript pages? Single-column publication form used in many math journals or the scrunched two-column format used by many engineering and science journals?
They stripped the kid of his original nationality to take credit. What utter desperation they must be feeling to take credit.
I act as if I'm throwing the ball, and from the speed and angle of my arm he instantly calculates where it will land. Except I don't throw it, which means he solves it computationally, rather than through observation.
"-gravity is not a constant vector force downward. It is a radial force inward toward the center of the Earth, and its intensity varies with altitude."
for any calculations on a scale less than 10 miles, assuming a constant will give you the same answer within a margin of error that is outside the ability of any store bought calculator.
Brick and mortar only or app stores too? Can a calculator that offer 20 digits of precision get inside that margin? Many store bought, and many apps based upon the FPU - a bad idea for many reasons, only seem to offer around 14 give or take.
FWIW, the actual motivation for 20 digits of precision was to be able to handle calculations compatible with 64-bit results. Not the sort of exercise above.
n/t
Someone seems to have quickly whipped up a wikipedia entry on Shouryya Ray. He seems to be the quintessential genius Indian kid of immigrant parents. Learnt calculus at 6 from his father in Calcutta, migrated to Germany with his parents at 12 where he quickly mastered the German language and finished the high school matriculation 2 years ahead of his age. And then goes and solves two 300 yr old unsolved problems which even Newton couldn't solve just 'cause that they told him that they cannot be solved.
But here's the baffling zinger. They gave him *second* prize for this!?? What was the first prize for? Inventing time travel?
Unassisted shells have pretty decent range (26 miles or so), and specialty weapons can go even further.
Artillery shells are in the process of becoming self guided. They are no longer limited to ballistic trajectories.
Besides, the ballistic models that the modern militaries use incorporate an incredible number of variables. This research would probably offer no practical improvement, it most likely uses a simplified model of air resistance.
That said I am no expert, I merely did a ballistics project as part of a differential equations class.
I have a couple of these "don't listen to parents" examples. I had the idea in 6th grade to have a car run on perpetual motion, just put a generator in front to capture the energy and feed it back. My parents and grandparents told me, correctly, that' won't work because of the laws of theromdynamics, which they explained and I understood. I thought about it, then said "But what if I wanted the car to stop? Could it be used as a brake, to capture the energy?"
No, they said. And I dropped it.
Gently reply
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouryya_Ray
Too man sciences too quickly KNOW that something IS NOT POSSIBLE. They forget that absolute certain belongs in the realm of religion.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
Take the case of throwing a baseball. This is case 2 from parent
Assume that the magnitude of the drag on the ball is proportional to the square of its velocity. Also, assume that the magnitude of the gravitational force is constant. You get the following set of differential equations:
x''(t)*m=A * (x'(t)^2+y'(t)^2) * cos(theta)
y''(t)*m=A * (x'(t)^2+y'(t)^2) * sin(theta) + g * m
theta=arctan(y'(t)/x'(t))
Where:
x(t) is the horizontal position of the ball at time t
x'(t) is the horizontal velocity of the ball
x''(t) is the acceleration
y(t) is the vertical position of the ball
(x'(t)^2+y'(t)^2) is the square of the velocity
theta is the angle of travel above the horizontal
m, A and g are constant over time*
*
A=-1/2*drag coefficient*cross sectional area of ball*air density
m is the mass of the ball
g is acceleration due to gravity
Article from 2009 http://www.news.com.au/technology/german-teen-shouryya-ray-solves-300-year-old-mathematical-riddle-posed-by-sir-isaac-newton/story-e6frfro0-1226368490157#ixzz1w3LI5N1w' Bernoulli numbers solved by a 16 year-old. In this case an immigrant from Iraq living in Sweden. Bernoulli instead of Newton. But essential the same story.
I'm honestly not sure that the system is actually designed to discourage this (though it certainly feels like it). It's just an unintended consequence of the relatively low IQ levels of the teachers and administrators who design such systems, and the teachers who are actually doing the teaching. IQ, intelligence, call it what you will - is distributed in something approximated by a bell curve. If you had the brains to be doing advanced geometry and algebra at age 8, you are very, very likely to be smarter than virtually everyone involved in designing, administering and implementing education at any given primary or secondary school. You have an IQ that is high enough to be very rare.
There are lots of sad corollaries to this fact. Firstly, there are no resources to design an education system around a student that is 1/500, 1/1000, let alone 1/10000 in terms of rarity in the population. As soon as we approach the inverse of school population, there may not even be any student in the school who is that smart.
Secondly, it takes a smart person to understand statistics, the concept of distributions and the like. Even understanding my first two paragraphs is above the head of the average person. Due to influence of PC, its component blank slatism and the like, the number of people who both can and would even want to understand IQ, bell curves and the implications of the distribution of intelligence is even less. The ramification of this is that the vast majority of people automatically assume that anything they can't understand is either wrong or crazy, and impossible for anyone else to understand. It is insulting for many people to realize that there are problems that are too difficult for them to ever solve, but that others can solve with varying amounts of difficulty (or ease). They have an in-built chip on their shoulder towards these concepts. Most people also assume that they are smart enough to figure out who is smarter than they are, despite not realizing that there is a class of problems for which they will never, ever solve or perhaps even understand the solution, and so are incapable of judging those who will solve such things.
Then you have the problem of recruiting teachers who are capable of teaching a very bright child, if that is what you want your school system to do. There aren't any. The vast majority of the very small relative number of bright people in a given country are taking advantage of the exploitation of IQ by companies. Those who aren't duped by graduate schools into pursuing graduate education with no monetary payoff are busy earning lots of money, with job security and great working conditions. Why would they want to teach a bunch of relative dullards, when the pay is not there and the working conditions are crap? They are off doing medicine, engineering, law, business and the like.
So what do you get when your average teacher does not (want to) realize that any kid in class is smarter than they are, and can do mental gymnastics that they will never, ever achieve? And does not have the resources to allocate to it? And do not have teachers capable of teaching them? You get the current education system.
If you want to give a smart kid the opportunities to learn, you must do as the parents of the boy in this article did. You must school him yourself until he hits the point where he can autodidactically learn anything he wants to, and then give him the resources to pursue that. There is no substitute for a smart, motivated parent, involved in his child's education.
If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
The partial answer to the 2 questions are: 1..calculate exactly the path of a projectile under gravity and subject to air resistance Partial answer: What goes up eventually comes down. 2..dealing with the collision of a body with a wall Partial answer: Insurance company
Who do they think they are? Australia?
I find it funny how everybody is calling him a kid. I saw this article in my quaint dead-tree formant newspaper this morning, and it had a picture of him.
I think he needs to be congratulated even more by being able to grow a full moustache at the age of 16. Impressive feat!
just wanna fly...
I'm good at math but my teacher tried to teach me calculus at age 16 and I couldn't understand shit.
He worked out how to calculate exactly the path of a projectile under gravity and subject to air resistance.
What does this even mean? Linear (Stokes) drag forces (idealized)? Turbulent drag forces? Something in between? For a bluff body? A streamlined body? A tumbling body? In still air of uniform density? In a wind? In actual air that might well vary significantly in density and temperature along the (highly ballistic) trajectory?
I'm assuming that it isn't just Stokes drag, as that never struck me as being unsolvable (it certainly isn't vertically) or quadratic drag (also directly integrable vertically) so it must be one of the "interesting" cases, but TFA doesn't say. Not to take anything away from the young man in question, either -- I'm sure he's very bright and that his solutions are peachy-keen.
I am, however, having a hard time seeing how this will improve ballistics solutions in any case whatsoever compared to numerical solutions; ultimately one has to deal with real nonlinear fluid dynamics to solve almost any sort of less-idealized ballistics problem, the sort involving Navier-Stokes and solution spaces that haven't even been formally proven to exist yet. The idealized problems are good for understanding qualitative behavior, but not so good for quantitative prediction in all but very special cases. Computers really are going to win hands down in almost all problems one can pose in this general arena.
rgb
Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
As I posted further down, I think I agree. Although I still don't know which problem it is that can't be solved that he solved -- I'm assuming linear drag forces, which should indeed be analytically solvable. It certainly is in one dimension.
But this does not (as I also note) really help, since almost nothing falls according to Stokes drag.
rgb
Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
When a man says "it's impossible" what he means to say is "I don't know how to do it."
From the article, a quote from the boy's father (an engineer who personally taught his son calculus):
"He never discussed his project with me before it was finished and the mathematics he used are far beyond my reach,"
Far beyond his reach? Anyone who has taken a basic calculus course should have the background to follow the nicely reverse-engineered proof featured here on reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/u7551/teen_solves_newtons_300yearold_riddle_an/c4t03fl
Seriously, go ahead and try it. Use an integral table for the last step if you have to. The math background of an engineer (multiple courses in calculus and differential equations) should be adequate. I know we don't have the original proof yet, but, given the simple elegance of the above solution, I'll bet it's very similar. Just saying.
Just another case of Europeans and their youth science competitions. Does anyone remember Sarah Flannery? Interesting maths won all these comps, wrote a book about it, but ultimately it was wrong. I'm sure this will be revealed as a hoax or false alarm soon enough.
-HatEater
The kid is from the great mathematical background, he is INDIAN.
Great, I hope they'll use his proof to make more realistic Angry Birds releases.
... is far from perfect. Depending on which measure us use, Germany ranks somewhere in the top middle of the statistics. And it is definitely bad for both extremes of students: Those that are really bright and those that are - em - "intellectually challenged".
Ray's solution is an invariant during the trajectory. It doesn't really help with the integration, which is still to be done numerically.
As often seems to be the case with these news articles about teenage prodigies, this has been overhyped. It turns out that what he did is not new and is not a complete solution to the problem.
Parker, Am J Phys 45 (1977) 606 has a summary of the preexisting results. The expression immediately after equation 23 is the constant of the motion that Ray rediscovered.
A reddit user has a nice simple derivation: http://redd.it/u74no (Note that there is an error because he claims to have proved it in general, but it's only valid when v (the vertical velocity) is positive.)
For more on the history of the problem:
Synge and Griffith, Principles of Mechanics, p.~154 http://archive.org/details/principlesofmech031468mbp
Whittaker, A treatise on the analytical dynamics of particles and rigid bodies, p.~229 http://archive.org/details/treatisanalytdyn00whitrich
According to Whittaker this was first done by D'Alembert in 1744.
Find free books.
Perhaps next year Mr. Ra will solve one of Einstein's 120 year old problems.
Without seeing his solution (no links given in TFA) and peer review I cannot get excited yet.
I had not realised this is an unsolved problem. How then does artillery calculate elevation, and how did those WW2 battleships, with only electro-mechanical 'calculators', and AA gun 'Predictors' work it out? Just from empirical tables? I do have vague memories of doing this in Applied Maths at school, even taking air resistance into account. Just asking, like I'm just being naive and curious.
But is this media hype? I have known people who have gained an achievement and were then "picked up" by the media, even national media, out of all proportion to the achievement. The media always want stories.
And this : http://www.vip.it/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Shouryya-Ray-256x300.jpg is a German 16 year-old?
They stopped procreating out of laziness, and are gradually being replaced by cultures which actually love having children. By now, everybody's just hoping that the immigrants will adapt (and thus save) a little bit of the existing european culture before the indigenous populations are gone.
Germany, for example, is being replaced at a rate of roughly 200000 persons per year (negative birth-death numbers compensated by positive immigrant numbers), not counting the birth rate of already present immigrants.
The achievement would be downplayed. Then some "well respected"(read con-artist) 40-something would claim he found it first and will sue. about a month or two later the kid will be reprimanded in school, and we'll see him washed up at 19 struggling to fit in with the Marine Corps.
It seems that the source is news about the news about the news, and all around noone has actually shown his work the original "source" just being mention that he won an award in some local school contest. And most likely he just "rediscovered" (if he even did that) and old already know equation.
Is Ray a genius after embarking to unlock a math problem posed by Newton? Newton probably left this problem unsolved knowing that at his time he did not know how to put the equation into action or bring it into real life. What shred of imagination does this kid have? He unlocked Newton's problem, now what? We should praise him for his achievement and hope that his peers work on his good development ie. phylosophy, creativity and life in general. We just hope that Newton's findings and Ray's be put into good action and we hope that Newton's equation does not become a threat to humanity. Ray now resides in Germany, now Germany will see Ray's answer as "finders keepers," by the way the kid is Indian not German, which country gets the credit? JHammid
If you choose larger-sized text, you still have the same typeface, but a different font. Sorry for the derail, but the constant misuse of "font" really bugs me.
Just to reiterate, Helvetica is a typeface. Twelve point Helvetica bold is a font.
Anybody have an idea or link to find this actual problem?