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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.'"

414 comments

  1. That Moment by Rie+Beam · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:That Moment by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There are two things impressive about this. One is the fact that you mention, that the kid did not give up until he had the solution and was smart enough to solve a problem that stumped every mathemetician for 350 years. The second is that people still try to solve difficult analytic problems at all instead of just turning it into a computing problem.

      I don't know which surprises me more.

    2. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rest of your life will, unfortunately, now no longer live up to something you accomplished when you were 16.

      And you know that how?

      Germany still produces some rays of light.

    3. Re:That Moment by mwvdlee · · Score: 5, Funny

      The rest of your life will, unfortunately, now no longer live up to something you accomplished when you were 16.

      Imagine the freedom of no longer having to live up to anybody's expectations. ;)

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    4. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rest of your life will, unfortunately, now no longer live up to something you accomplished when you were 16.

      You never know, he might now go on to prove P = NP, or develop a unified theory of physics.

    5. Re:That Moment by chill · · Score: 4, Informative

      Germany still produces some rays of light.

      To be accurate... he was born in India and moved to Germany with his family at age 12. He did not speak a word of German when he arrived.

      While credit must be given to the German school system, I think most of his accomplishment comes from him and possibly his family.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    6. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While credit must be given to the German school system

      Must it? The school system could be garbage and still have the occasional intelligent person go through it. Perhaps it's not the school system that must be given credit, but something else (like the child himself, for instance).

    7. Re:That Moment by rvw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Germany still produces some rays of light.

      To be accurate... he was born in India and moved to Germany with his family at age 12. He did not speak a word of German when he arrived.

      While credit must be given to the German school system, I think most of his accomplishment comes from him and possibly his family.

      And maybe from not being in Europe or the western world the first twelve years of his life, adopting beliefs or creating a mental attitude that stuff like this cannot be done. And I'm not criticizing the Germans.

    8. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Computing tends to be a brute force analysis of all the possible inputs. That doesn't work well for NP hard problems and is often impossible with problems dealing with infinity... Not all problems are solvable by computers yet and instead need the analytical approach. Also computers may not find the most elegant solutions, for example there are problems which have been solved but required the invention of a new type of math to do so.

    9. Re:That Moment by epine · · Score: 1

      The rest of your life will, unfortunately, now no longer live up to something you accomplished when you were 16.

      Imagine the freedom of no longer having to live up to anybody's expectations. ;)

      Better yet, he doesn't have an Erdos number less than his age, so he can still hope for a normal sex life.

    10. Re:That Moment by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Analytic solutions are far superior to computed approximations. They are far easier to calculate--computers have made computed approximations far easier, but most of the time that doesn't mean that they're *easy*--only that they're now possible. Being able to obtain the answer in a small fraction of the time is still a big advantage. They are more precise and do not require initial parameters. And they provide much greater understanding and insight into the underlying phenomenon. There is no surprise at all that people are still looking for analytic solutions.

    11. Re:That Moment by jthill · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, this never happened to him before!

      I mean, I get you, but I think when you have to start asking "what produced _this_ guy?!??" all bets are off.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    12. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I know a quote in Spanish that says something like "As they didn't know it was impossible, they did it" ("Como no sabían que era imposible, lo hicieron").

    13. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He should have copy righted the work, so he would not need to accomplish anything else just like artists

    14. Re:That Moment by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Computing tends to be a brute force analysis of all the possible inputs.

      Hello? We've had symbolic computing ever since 1960's. There are many software tools today to assist mathematicians with creating and verifying proofs (e.g, Coq is probably the best known one). What's wrong with using them? Not to do that would be like using a pencil and paper instead of typing when you're preparing a publication – I'd think that brain power and time should be used constructively.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    15. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If he solved it, then WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?! There is no link, no nothing, and we are apparently to trust this lame emotional article with no factual content. I'm surprised nobody else raised this point.

    16. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      normal sex life.

      There's no such thing.

    17. Re:That Moment by mikael · · Score: 1

      More likely , one or more of his parents is a mathematics lecturer/teacher. They would know about the resources available. At least he would have needed to what the problem was and what kind of notation was required to solve it.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    18. Re:That Moment by EMN13 · · Score: 2

      Possibly relevant here (in some minor way) is that thinking in a foreign language allows people to be more rational.

    19. Re:That Moment by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Ha! Inventing a new mathmatical system in order to solve a problem is cheating!

      But it works.

    20. Re:That Moment by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      How about just ANY sex life?

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    21. Re:That Moment by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      You can solve any problem if you define it the way you want...for example, my wife once took a drafting course from a guy who said he'd made fools of centuries of mathematicians by trisecting an angle. Of course, his solution was an approximation, but he conveniently left out "theoretically exact" as part of the definition of a constructive solution. He said he was working on squaring the circle, too...

      I'd reserve your hosannas until this kid's magic formula gets published, along with a formal statement of the problem.

    22. Re:That Moment by trout007 · · Score: 2

      It depends on what you are trying to do. I'm a mechanical engineer and engineering is all about good enough. You have to economize resources to get a job done. While solving a dynamics problem analytically may give you more understanding into the solution it does take take to work out real world multidimensional problems. Numerical solutions to differential equations are very useful. I would have preferred to spend more time in Diff Eq setting up problems than solving problems analytically.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    23. Re:That Moment by iamhassi · · Score: 2

      There are two things impressive about this. One is the fact that you mention, that the kid did not give up until he had the solution and was smart enough to solve a problem that stumped every mathemetician for 350 years. The second is that people still try to solve difficult analytic problems at all instead of just turning it into a computing problem.

      I don't know which surprises me more.

      ^^^^ This.

      I think the most impressive part is that even though we hear all the time about "X-teen year old invents BLAH" we're like "Great!" but secretly think "BIG Deal! Who can't invent something? How is that challenging, really? Oh look their dad's an electrical engineer that works at XYZ... hmmmm....." but this 16-year-old actually solved something that the best mathematicians on Earth haven't been able to solve for 350 years.

      Major kudos kid! Only way that can be topped is if a teen cures cancer, aids or doubles productive lifespan.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    24. Re:That Moment by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 2

      Business wise I'd type, fiction wise I prefer to use pen and paper.

    25. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relax and use the force Shouryya!

      Closed Form or Runge Kutta, do or do not, there is no try.

      JJ

    26. Re:That Moment by iamhassi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Also he solved it without mooching off a company for 2 months (and still having nothing to show for it) or asking for $500,000! No $$$$ up front and he still brought results! This 16 yr old will go far, I would happily donate to this kid's next .... whatever he wants to do, since he's already earned it in my opinion.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    27. Re:That Moment by am+2k · · Score: 2

      Analytic solutions are far superior to computed approximations. They are far easier to calculate--computers have made computed approximations far easier, but most of the time that doesn't mean that they're *easy*--only that they're now possible. Being able to obtain the answer in a small fraction of the time is still a big advantage.

      Have fun with solving the Navier-Stokes equations then ;)

    28. Re:That Moment by skipdallas · · Score: 1

      And you know this how? Even if what you say turns out to be true, this young man has made a lasting name for himself in mathematics.

    29. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I just wanted to say that I LOVE Coq.

    30. Re:That Moment by ArundelCastle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What's wrong with using them? Not to do that would be like using a pencil and paper instead of typing when you're preparing a publication – I'd think that brain power and time should be used constructively.

      It's not a matter of the tool is wrong. It's a matter that assuming one tool is always best is wrong.
      Your premise is based on: using a computer is easier and better for 100% of humans. That's not true. Allow me to introduce you to my parents. Allow me to introduce you to senior engineers who can craft new formulas on a whiteboard faster than juniors can wake their laptops.

      Different areas of the brain are involved with the act of handwriting than with touch typing or pecking. Make LCARS speech recognition a reality and we have a winner. Solving problems that stump otherwise intelligent humans for *hundreds* of years, *clearly* requires some creatively alternate use of the brain, and not Microsoft Clippy. ("I see you're trying to solve an unprovable theorem, would you like to Quit without Saving?") I don't even need to cite sources that say poor UIs slow people down. That's how it is. Computers add cruft, otherwise there wouldn't be a market for applications that remove distractions when writing.

      ...like using a pencil and paper instead of typing when you're preparing a publication...

      Poor analogy. Publication implies mass reproduction and distribution. An *author* can write however they want to form their ideas, the result is the same. How the idea gets distributed is irrelevant to the core point. (Also there are such things as shorthand.)

    31. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For times like this, what we need is a "Droll" rating.

    32. Re:That Moment by ArundelCastle · · Score: 2

      A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools. (Douglas Adams)

    33. Re:That Moment by Cryophallion · · Score: 1

      Perhaps he should watch this TED video to feel better about it all:
      Elizabeth Gilbert: A new way to think about creativity
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=86x-u-tz0MA

    34. Re:That Moment by tixxit · · Score: 4, Informative

      The article states the father taught him calculus when he was 6. However, his father also says the kid passed his understanding a while ago and he doesn't understand the math used to solve this problem. Seems like the father was responsible for instilling a curiosity and some foundations, but after that it's all just this kid. You gotta give him credit.

    35. Re:That Moment by solidraven · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cause right now it doesn't sound all that impressive.
      Fact is that any engineering student who took fluid dynamics has had to solve similar problems like "A ball > was shot out of a cannon > into a gas with next properties: >. Calculate ... ." At least I remember I had to do that, and I'm not even a mechanical engineering major... So unless he found some super exact way to do it I'm not very impressed. And even if he found a very exact way to do it I'm still not impressed, it just means he bothered to waste more time on it and decided to not simplify irrelevant factors.
      Same with an object hitting a wall, you can go as far in calculating that on paper as you want. It's just questionable if there's a point to it cause the analytic solutions are often very generalised and useless for actual modelling of physical systems.
      In fact exact analytic modelling of physical systems sort of became a joke with us EEs. Cause you always end up using statistical physics when dealing with semiconductors or very gross over simplifications; Like using Kirchoff and Ohm instead of Maxwell's equations. And at the point where you introduce statistics and probability into a problem -as is always the case with very complex realistic modelling- you can just as well use a computer program to verify the solution. The computer is less prone to errors (if configured correctly), faster and will be able to visually represent the results without having to spend hours of additional work. The resulting time is better spent sniffing solder fumes, playing minesweeper on logic analysers, working on your own personal projects in the lab, drinking coffee, ...
      Conclusion: Either the article must be mentioning something very wrong or this is another case of blowing up a highschool student's achievements to make a feel good story.

    36. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any sex life is normal if it involves another person and you enjoy it. No? :)

    37. Re:That Moment by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      The simple answer is "Bias" in the programming. Everyone has a bias of some type and as this kid proved once again, there are many different ways to look at a problem as he hadn't yet reached the "Impossible stage" of thinking. Once Ossification of the thinking process sets in, everyone begins to add more and more bias (assumptions) to what they're doing based upon past experience/knowledge, which is why it is so important to encourage kids to look at the world with wide eye innocence.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    38. Re:That Moment by gd2shoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ha! Inventing a new mathmatical system in order to solve a problem is cheating! But it works.

      Not only is it cheating, it's tradition. We have many great branches of mathematics because of it.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    39. Re:That Moment by mikael · · Score: 1

      Agreed. He could just have got bored and just learned a bit to keep his parents happy. But he managed to do sonething new and get a paper published in a maths journal. He will probably becone a MIT maths professor.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    40. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computing tends to be a brute force analysis of all the possible inputs.

      Hello? We've had symbolic computing ever since 1960's. There are many software tools today to assist mathematicians with creating and verifying proofs (e.g, Coq is probably the best known one). What's wrong with using them? Not to do that would be like using a pencil and paper instead of typing when you're preparing a publication – I'd think that brain power and time should be used constructively.

      is your software proven to be fault-free?

      is your hardware proven to be fault-free? (have you ever read the list of errata for a modern CPU?)

      if your software puts out a human readable (and verifiable) form of the proof everything is fine, if not you can only talk about probabilities not about proof.

    41. Re:That Moment by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      is your software proven to be fault-free?

      is your hardware proven to be fault-free? (have you ever read the list of errata for a modern CPU?)

      if your software puts out a human readable (and verifiable) form of the proof everything is fine, if not you can only talk about probabilities not about proof.

      First, you have to ask the same thing about mathematicians' brains and abilites (organic HW and SW). Second, of course that a proof assistant has to be able to print out a trace of the reasoning process. That's the whole point (or one of them).

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    42. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Analytical solutions are well-natured computing problems. I remember in my youth that a friend of mine was doing her diploma on some recursively defined probability distribution based on integrals of an exponential distribution. This thing has a cut-off at zero, and the recursion and the integral bounds combined. This was in the age before symbolic computation, and the literature approach was numeric integration using Simpson. Unfortunately, the error estimates of Simpson integration depend on the second or something derivative of the function, and we were talking about a function with exponential parts, and jumps. And there was significant fan-out, so to get at a recursion depth of 10, they used about 5 points for their Simpson and took days.

      I proposed doing it symbolically. It was a heck of a lot of math, resulting in polynomials times exponential functions, but the point was that doing it symbolically meant you could combine coefficients at each level of recursion, and thus the number of terms grew about quadratically with recursion depth instead of exponentially.

      The end result was much faster to calculate and fairly accurate, and it showed where the braindead numeric approach in literature tapered off into the realm of the nonsensical.

      An analytic formula is still a computing problem, but usually one that is very well-behaved and well-understood in complexity.

      Now this was basically a math problem, but as a programmer I am also frequently appalled at colleagues who are perfectly convinced that the basic job is done when one has turned the problem into an O(NP) algorithm, and now one just needs to obfuscate the code with optimizations reducing the running time by a constant factor (rewrite the inner loops in assembly language, weed out half the computations and stuff like that).

    43. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have fun writing well performing numerical approximation algorithms for those if you can't work out analytical solutions for easy corner cases ;)

    44. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computers don't prove mathematical theorems; they only show raw computing power. A million solved cases can all be rendered useless if there is a single counter example.

    45. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would think it would improve efficiency and accuracy in the calculation if the new solution were used as well, but I'm not well versed in math enough to know for sure (I did take higher level math classes but mind dumped it all after the classes). Is this true?

    46. Re:That Moment by Jstlook · · Score: 1

      Just had to point out how appropriate this xkcd is:
      http://xkcd.com/447/

      --
      ---jstlook ---For that is the way of Elves, for they say both yes AND no, and mean every word of it. --- J.R.R.T.
    47. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, I doubt any of my teachers had any idea if a problem was unsolvable.

    48. Re:That Moment by whit3 · · Score: 1

      >Have fun writing...algorithms for those if you can't work out analytical solutions

      Truth. It's easy to write code, but only a good little
      computable-on-back-of-an-envelope test case will give
      me confidence in it. I've found errors that were hidden
      four decimals down in my brute-force algorithms.

    49. Re:That Moment by Karellen · · Score: 2

      In fact, Newton did this himself.

      I recall a story of some mathematical puzzle or hypothesis which had been unsolved by a number of mathematicians for many years. It was brought to Newton's attention, whereupon over the course of a few days (maybe a weekend?) he invented a new branch of mathematics and solved the puzzle. He published his results anonymously, but no-one was fooled and immediately (if somewhat resignedly) congratulated Newton on his genius (again).

      Can't remember the hypothesis or the resulting branch of mathematics though.

      --
      Why doesn't the gene pool have a life guard?
    50. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No. Analytically solution are definitely of theoretical interests, but they are not necessarily the best way to compute something. Simple example : the roots 4th degree polynomials. Due to floating point oddities, the analytic roots will yield inaccurate results, compared to numerical approaches, say Laguerre method.

    51. Re:That Moment by cavreader · · Score: 2

      It's people like this kid who pop-up very rarely in the world that will eventually improve our mathematical understanding and all the technology based on advanced mathematics. That's a positive thing.

    52. Re:That Moment by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Also he solved it without mooching off a company for 2 months (and still having nothing to show for it) or asking for $500,000! No $$$$ up front and he still brought results! This 16 yr old will go far, I would happily donate to this kid's next .... whatever he wants to do, since he's already earned it in my opinion.

      As far as Ted Kacinsky? Don't count your chickens before they're hatched. Let the kid live his life.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    53. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For any genius teens reading this, please ignore the mention about doubling productive lifespan. Please don't invent this, humans live long enough as it is, I don't want this planet utterly screwed any faster than it is currently.

    54. Re:That Moment by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I love ISABELLE myself, but hey, whatever floats your sequent.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    55. Re:That Moment by Pseudonym · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Analytic solutions are not necessarily easier to calculate.

      Analytic solutions tend to involve special functions for which the computer can only compute an approximation anyway. Have you ever tried to write code to evaluate the error function over the entire domain of floating point numbers? (Yes, I know, it's now in the standard library; ten years ago, it wasn't.) That's one of the easier ones.

      Even if there are no special functions, analytic solutions are still often harder to calculate if the problem is big enough. Think of solving systems of linear equations, one of the standard workhorses of numeric programming. We're talking really big ones; hundreds of thousands of equations in hundreds of thousands of unknowns or bigger. In the real world, this problem would almost certainly be solved using successive approximations, even though high school students know how to solve them analytically.

      Finally, and most importantly, the problem statement is usually an approximation. Take the OP as an example. What this kid almost certainly solved was an analytic solution to the problem of a particle in a gravitational field with linear air resistance. Well, air resistance is not linear. At low velocities, and for projectiles with a sufficiently small cross-section, it's close enough. But it's still an approximation.

      The advantages of analytic solutions are almost always not computational. What they buy you is understanding. The methods of obtaining the solution, and the form of the final equations, often reveal some deep insights about the problem. For many situations, that's far more valuable. And it's certainly something that no computer can give you.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    56. Re:That Moment by gardyloo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I suspect you're thinking of the brachistochrone problem, posed by Johann Bernoulli in 1696, and solved the next day by Newton (also by several other mathematical giants of the time, very quickly).

    57. Re:That Moment by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Computing has too much brute force to it very often. Sure you could do it the hard way and when things take too long you just claim you need more memory and a faster CPU (sort of like Word). Whereas if you have the formula you can do it very quickly instead even on a slow computer. When you get off of the dumbed down desktop computer people still care about how long stuff takes to run.

    58. Re:That Moment by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      Methinks this article is more about the boundless potential of human creativity when applied to technological problem solving, and not so much ballistics.

    59. Re:That Moment by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      You must be new here.

    60. Re:That Moment by fluffy99 · · Score: 1

      Analytic solutions are far superior to computed approximations. They are far easier to calculate--computers have made computed approximations far easier, but most of the time that doesn't mean that they're *easy*--only that they're now possible. Being able to obtain the answer in a small fraction of the time is still a big advantage.

      Have fun with solving the Navier-Stokes equations then ;)

      For most engineering problems, you don't need the exact answer. You just need a sufficiently accurate one. For NS, the trick was recognizing which terms were tiny and throwing them out. Who cares if your answer is 0.000001% off if it means reducing the equation down to 4 parts that can be easily solved on paper.

    61. Re:That Moment by brillow · · Score: 1

      I've known enough scientists from enough countries to know that if there is a culture which has intellectual ossification, its not Germany. In fact, the western world has a research enterprise in place which is of much higher caliber than the rest of the world. It may be because the western world has been intellectually liberated for much longer than the rest of the world.

    62. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're being incredibly pedantic and missing the point. A large section of modern math proofs are more analogous to distribution than they are to forming ideas.

      I suspect you haven't seen a modern mathematical proof, because of your analogies. There's kernels that remain to be proven by humans (else a computer would already have generated the proof), but there's also a lot of gruntwork that can easily be done by computer or by students or whatever.

    63. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC, we need to talk.

          -- your wife

    64. Re:That Moment by schroedingers_hat · · Score: 1

      There's also the fact that teaching methods and notation are technologies and improve over time.
      Try doing complex EM calculations purely in component form some time, or do your taxes in roman numerals or ancient greek notation -- or without 0.
      If you had to spend a lot of time learning how to use trig tables for multiplication I'd wager you would have much more trouble/less time for learning algebra.

    65. Re:That Moment by thereitis · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately in the past I have found the problems that actually are impossible to be the most interesting, like infinite compression and free energy. :)

    66. Re:That Moment by locrien · · Score: 1

      It's not how big your Coq is; It's how you use it.

    67. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well actually if you can find the base case only then you can transform a problem to a computing. Else i guess it's hard what we cant percieve to transform it properly to computing problem.

    68. Re:That Moment by gazbo · · Score: 1

      I imagine that using trig tables for multiplication would hold you back, yes.

    69. Re:That Moment by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Good luck solving NS in the presence of turbulence.

    70. Re:That Moment by galaad2 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'd reserve your hosannas until this kid's magic formula gets published, along with a formal statement of the problem.

      the formula has already been published, here: https://www.jugend-forscht.de/images/1MAT_67_download.jpg
      (photo of the formula taken on May 18th)

      article source:
      https://www.jugend-forscht.de/index.php/projectsearch/detail/6038.4568
      and
      http://www.jufo-dresden.de/projekt/teilnehmer/matheinfo/m1

      i can't find the full paper yet though, but on reddit some users claim that the formula works in Maple
      e.g.
      http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/u7551/teen_solves_newtons_300yearold_riddle_an/c4szejb

      where f is constant on the path the particle makes in the space of velocities:
      f:=(g^2 /(2*u^2 ) + a*(g/2)*(v*sqrt(u^2 +v^2 )/(u^2 ) + arcsinh(v/u)));

      --
      root@127.0.0.1
    71. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have surprised too much ..

    72. Re:That Moment by Carewolf · · Score: 2

      What's wrong with using them?

      They are not helpful. Automatic proof, or automatic proof-verification is a research field, and has been so for decades, and has still YET to come up with something helpful to anyone doing real mathematical proofs. They have only barely reached the ability to help with play-thing problems handed to high school students, and even them the computer generated result (or input), is obtuse and stupid - not helpful in any way.

    73. Re:That Moment by treeves · · Score: 1

      Didn't Einstein come up with tensors to work out general relativity?

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    74. Re:That Moment by treeves · · Score: 1

      I suspect he meant log tables. Be a human slide rule.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    75. Re:That Moment by treeves · · Score: 1

      I disagree with his point in any case.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    76. Re:That Moment by VendingMenace · · Score: 1

      There are three things to say to this:

      First, saying that he was just "lucky" is ridiculous. There have been several decades, at least, during which children were taught algebra as a matter of course. In those decades, no one else solved this problem. Please recognize that this solution required a brilliant moment of insight -- aka genius -- in order to solve. Does this mean that he will ALWAYS have these insights? No. But that doesn't mean that this was not, in itself, a work of genius.

      Second, even if he never has another moment of genius, he is still pretty damn smart. AND he is willing to work hard. I would rather hire a smart, hard working person, than someone that tries to denigrate this hard work as "lucky." In fact, I would probably rather hire that guy than a true genius that wasn't willing to work hard.

      Third, what, exactly, do you think we should idolize people for? We give out medals of honor for a single act of bravery. Should we say, "Meh, sure that guy did something awesome, but he probably won't save another whole platoon on his own again"? Or, for the Pulitzer Prize, do we say "Sure this is the best book this year, but he probably won't write the best book of NEXT year"? Even Nobel prizes are given out for a single discovery and a single (or just a few) papers. I would say that this kid deserves recognition. Just because you haven't done anything as awesome in your life, doesn't mean that we shouldn't recognize people that do.

    77. Re:That Moment by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      That's what peer review is for, to vet the reasoning process and therefore, the crux of the domain of the output and its veracity. My experience is that people that are trained in long hand-drawn proofs are more comfortable with that process, while those comfy with the limitations of various processors, languages, FPUs and modes of expression will use those.

      Tools: mind first, medium second.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    78. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another reason that analytical solutions are extremely important in practice is that they serve as test cases for the numerical methods required to solve similar-but-less-tractable versions of the same problem.

    79. Re:That Moment by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      aren't you happy now that you didn't forget to hit that "Post Anonymously" check box?

    80. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just wanted to say that I LOVE Coq.

      Coq sucks.

    81. Re:That Moment by qu33ksilver · · Score: 1

      Yes, in 8th standard I learnt that to solve equations having 'n' unknowns, you need at least 'n' equations. I tried to solve an equation having 2 variables using only that equation. I tried for around half-hour and left. Wonder if it would have been solved if the boy tried it !!

    82. Re:That Moment by Zordak · · Score: 1

      Also, his real name is Asok and he can grow a third arm when facing an impossible deadline.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    83. Re:That Moment by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Also he solved it without mooching off a company for 2 months (and still having nothing to show for it) or asking for $500,000! No $$$$ up front and he still brought results! This 16 yr old will go far, I would happily donate to this kid's next .... whatever he wants to do, since he's already earned it in my opinion.

      the squatter got investment.. ..and this teenager was probably mooching off home anyways, like most kids do.

      anyhow, if you want to mooch off, I'll bet you 100 bucks the aol squatter would have preferred german social security to aols free showers.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    84. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to say that I LOVE Coq.

      Coq sucks.

      Somehow, I think you have that backwards.

    85. Re:That Moment by drcesteffen · · Score: 1

      The actual problem statement for most of us is how to solve math problems while simultaneously making money proportional to the usefulness or proportional to the time spent on this problem and other unsuccessful problem attempts. Otherwise, we end up going out of business.

    86. Re:That Moment by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      Minor counter-example....5th order polynomials have exact solutions, but truncation and cancellation error makes calculation difficult when they are close together. A comparably well implemented interative solver is actually about the same speed, and more stable. Not that this invalidates the countless other situations where analytic solutions are better.

    87. Re:That Moment by fluffy99 · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting really accurate FEA results in turbulent flow as well. I do testing on large scale models to validate the predictions created using computational models. More often than not, the models are not very accurate and they end up 'adjusting' the models to match the actual results.

    88. Re:That Moment by doppe1 · · Score: 1

      Well I'm a physicist, and I usually don't believe any numerical solution unless I have an analytical solution to an approximation of the numerical problem which I can compare the numerical solution to. Analytical solutions provide extremely useful benchmarks for verifying and validating numerical solutions.

    89. Re:That Moment by MPAndonee · · Score: 1

      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.

      Not necessarily true.

      I remember sitting in class, in High School, maybe Junior High, and asked such a problem, and being the only one in a class of 45+ able to solve it,

      BTW, my solution was unique, as in, the teacher had never seen it before. So, yeah, what Shouryya Ray did was VERY IMPRESSIVE, but, solving problems at 16? My mind was very agile back then. I've lost a lot since then.

      --
      Nothing to see here -- move along now...
    90. Re:That Moment by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'd much rather have an analytic solution, or even a formulaic approximation. Sometimes approximations are quite good and come in the form of an upper bound and a lower bound so you can calculate not only about the right answer, but an absolute limit on the error in the answer. It's quite common to find approximate solutions for problems with no (known) analytic answer that are very accurate for large x and others that are very accurate for small x. As an engineer, I'm reasonably satisfied with such a solution, but there's nothing like an analytic answer that's valid for all ranges of all the variables.

    91. Re:That Moment by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      I think the most impressive part is that even though we hear all the time about "X-teen year old invents BLAH" we're like "Great!" but secretly think "BIG Deal! Who can't invent something? How is that challenging, really? Oh look their dad's an electrical engineer that works at XYZ... hmmmm....." but this 16-year-old actually solved something that the best mathematicians on Earth haven't been able to solve for 350 years. Major kudos kid! Only way that can be topped is if a teen cures cancer, aids or doubles productive lifespan.

      Major achievements in medicine are achieved more by sweat than brilliance and never by 16 year old kids because it takes years to carry out such the experiments and 11 year olds don't have the wherewithal let alone the permission to carry out biological experiments on humans. If a 16 year old cures cancer, we won't know it until he's thirty and then we'll wonder about the validity of any claim that he came up with the idea when he was 16.

    92. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      https://www.jugend-forscht.de/images/1MAT_67_download.jpg

    93. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if it involves wearing a giraffe costume and hot wax?

    94. Re:That Moment by schroedingers_hat · · Score: 1

      I meant trig tables.
      Also I would be interested to hear a rebuttal rather than simply 'I disagree'. Perhaps the multiplication example was a bad one as it wouldn't hold you back much with, but I know how hard it is to follow an EM textbook written in component form (I managed to grab one written just after the turn of the last century).
      I'd imagine trying to understand exponentiation, or differential equations using greek numeral notation or without any explicit concept of e or logarithms (you can still solve x' = x using series) would be similarly difficult and cause the same sort of difficulties that special functions (erf, bessel functions etc) cause (or worse) for many contemporary students.

    95. Re:That Moment by schroedingers_hat · · Score: 1

      always notice the mistake after hitting submit: 'hold you back much with basic algebra as you could use small/integer coefficients'

    96. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computers are only useful for certain types of maths. They are very good at number crunching lots of numbers. When it comes to some mathimatical problems, computers become useless as they can't think, and it's the thinking part that requires the effort, not the number crunching. So, using a computer would actually be slower than using pen and paper and your brain.

    97. Re:That Moment by TheMathemagician · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting your theorem prover to prove the Poincare conjecture. Why not prove the Riemann hypothesis too when you've finished. These proof checkers are useful for error-free symbolic manipulation but when a mathematician proves a new fundamental theorem it's not the proof which is important. It's the new tools/concepts he had to create to get there. As an earlier poster mentioned, teams of mathematicians have been working for years to break down and simplify Perelman's proof into simpler chunks. Also the "pathfinders" for a proof usually don't find the most elegant method and others (who couldn't have come up with the original proof) are able to simplify and improve it.

    98. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can u share me the problem solved by this guy. pls mail to yesjitender@yahoo.com

    99. Re:That Moment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I found this from google. I am totally new to this site. pls share this info to yesjitender@yahoo.com
      Jitender khurana
      Delhi, India.

    100. Re:That Moment by jitenderkhurana · · Score: 1

      can u pls share me the objective and puzzle solved by Shourya. I will be very thankful to you. I am new to this site so dont know much about its working. I did nt find even any way to send any msg to other users.

    101. Re:That Moment by Idbar · · Score: 1

      Well, if there was an analytic solution to the integral of a Gaussian you wouldn't need these calculations you're talking about.

      And even then having an analytical solution to the problem can give you clues about analytical approximations as well, which in turn would make the computations faster.

    102. Re:That Moment by treeves · · Score: 1

      I disagreed because I assume , from what you wrote, that using trig tables for multiplication, is but one method of several that is taught, not the only method, and learning more than one way to do something is better than learning just one way, since it gives you flexibility, and you can pick the one that's best for you, and it just gives you insight into other things.
      I admit I did not know about the use of trig identities to do multiplication that you linked to. That's interesting and I'm glad you taught me something!

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    103. Re:That Moment by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to say that I LOVE Coq.

      Coq sucks.

      Somehow, I think you have that backwards.

      Not in Soviet Russia.

    104. Re:That Moment by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      I suspect you're thinking of the brachistochrone problem, posed by Johann Bernoulli in 1696, and solved the next day by Newton (also by several other mathematical giants of the time, very quickly).

      Sounds a bit like crowdsourcing to me.

    105. Re:That Moment by mr_mischief · · Score: 1

      I can double the productive hours during your lifespan: get the hell off of /. ;-)

  2. Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by xtal · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Concepts of mathematics (calculus) are actually very simple.

      Most confuse the trivia of solving problems (knowing many rules) and how to apply them with understanding of basic mathematical principles.

      Teach your kid about 'x' and abstract thinking in relation to rates of change. The rest follows quite naturally. (IMO).

      --
      ..don't panic
    2. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      With all these things the kid probably started at 6 and got it all wrong rather then claim to be able to understand it at 6. Otherwise I think he's full of shit.

    3. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Everything that precedes calc, besides trig, is super easy and a smart kid can soak it up in a few months.

    4. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by dysan27 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll bet you that any 6 year old can solve the problem of where a ballistic projectile will be, even accounting for air resistance, in real time without a computer.

      Don't believe me? Toss them a ball. The rest is just notation.

    5. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "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."

      Last time I checked, the AP Calculus course was taken only by about 10% of high school students in the US.

      So I would say that Calculus by 12 is something for geniuses, not simply "smart kids".

    6. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      10% is about the number going to university straight off high school where I live, so it's "smart kids" I think, and not geniuses. I'm pretty sure none in my yeargroup were geniuses, although there were some scary smart kids in the mix (and we were already a selection of less than 1%, doing a beta science study).

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    7. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by ebcdic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No. The problem is to determine the trajectory from the initial position and velocity. A human tracks the ball as it moves, which is a completely different problem.

    8. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      "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."

      Last time I checked, the AP Calculus course was taken only by about 10% of high school students in the US.

      So I would say that Calculus by 12 is something for geniuses, not simply "smart kids".

      So if you learn something the majority of people doesn't bother to learn, you're automatically a genius?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    9. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How you mean different problem? There's position, and velocity vector, no more no less.

      Besides, you need to give the humans kudo's for making such accurate measurements, too.

    10. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by 2.7182 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was not a prodigy, but a really smart kid who was in many environments with prodigies or near prodigies.

      My experience has been that most pre-teen children with this history don't understand the material very well, and there tends to be a lot of exaggeration about it. Smart kids are good at mimicking things and that is all that is really need to "do" the first year or two of college math.

      Occasionally, but very occasionally you get someone really young who later goes on to do decent, or even more rarely great things, like Norbert Wiener or Terry Tao. But I would like to hear those people give their opinions of the depth of their understanding at that age.

      I knew Nadine Kowalsky, who in HS would essentially just remember everything she heard in class and got 100 on every exam. (She wasn't the only one though. I knew a number of other people like that though that didn't do as well as Nadine did.) She later went on to get a Ph.D. from Chicago and published her thesis in the Annals of Math. That is a journal most mathematicians can't get a paper in. Like publishing in Nature or Science. Nadine was the real deal, but sadly she died of cancer not long after finishing her Ph.D. But I don't believe that Nadine was doing calculus until she was 15. And that was certainly on purpose. She, and her parents apparently, knew what was a good idea to do, and not to do, with a super smart kid. (This last sentence is conjecture on my part.)

      But I think most cases of pre-teens you hear about are really not what they are made out to be. Once you get to 12 or 13 those, I think things do change a lot.

    11. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was doing advanced Geometry and Algebra at age 8, yes I'm a slow fool compared to this kid. but it's mostly the quality of teachers (his dad) and the willingness to keep giving a kid what they want and challenging them.

      The american school system is designed to DISCOURAGE this. Smart kids are told to be happy with the A they got without trying. If they challenge their teachers knowledge they are told they are wrong. Mostly because Grade-High-school education in the USA is simply following a lesson out of a book and not teaching it from an expert. the Gym teacher teaches computer class, The English teacher teaches Chemistry, and all of it creates a ho hum boring as hell experience for the children.

      Here in the USA we do NOT want geniuses, we want good factory and office workers. Mediocre will not challenge authority.

      yes I am jaded at the education system here. I was one of them that got bad grades because the teachers were idiots. I challenged my math teacher who could not believe that a kid can do multiplication and simple geometry in his head. I proved it on several occasions, but I was given failing grades for not doing the busywork of writing it all out. Plus I refused to learn his technique. It sucked and was harder than what I was using that came from college text books. So I ended up being a pissed off moody kid hating the education system because all I saw was idiots and morons trying to tell me they knew more than Me and I knew that they were wrong. I was reading at a 14th grade level when I was 12 years old. I read 1984 and understood the concepts and hidden meanings. I was devouring Vonnegut with a passion. I was told that the books were "too grown up for me" Everyone talked down to me and all it did was piss me off.

      Sadly I did not have rich parents, so I had to suffer through the waste of time that the American Public School system is. College I slept through and aced it, at least they were not morons requiring me to turn in worthless busy work. It was in college where I ran into real education, educators that actually knew what they were talking about and would actually hold a discussion with me and help me learn more.

      This is the problem here in the USA. If you are smart, you have a sack put over your head to slow you down to match the rest of the other students.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    12. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by WCguru42 · · Score: 2

      Catching a ball is a feedback mechanism. See where the ball is, compare to where the ball was, move (hands or feet, depending on how far off you are). Repeat as necessary.

      --
      "Educate the mind but never at the expense of the soul."~Blessed Basil Moreau
    13. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by gremlinuk · · Score: 3

      Of course it's a different problem.

      The first is a prediction from a known initial state, the second is an exercise in analytical approximation that just means you have to get your hands to reach the same position in space and time as the ball, based upon a continuous stream of information of ever-increasing accuracy about the relationship between said hands and the ball over time.

      Wildly different exercises.

    14. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait: I wrote "Calculus by 12".

      If about 10% of HIGH school students follow the AP Calculus course, well, far fewer will be able to follow it when they're 12 or less (MIDDLE school age).

      I don't even think that there're statistics about it, I suppose they are less than 1%. Maybe I live on another planet, but personally I've never met anyone following a Calculus course at middle school, I don't even know where they could attend it.

    15. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by russotto · · Score: 2

      Concepts of mathematics (calculus) are actually very simple.

      Most confuse the trivia of solving problems (knowing many rules) and how to apply them with understanding of basic mathematical principles.

      This isn't just integral calculus, though; it's differential equations. Finding an analytic solution to a nonlinear differential equation is often difficult, sometimes (provably) impossible.

    16. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by xtal · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The principles of differential equations are also simple and there are many simple physical systems that can be used to demonstrate them in a way that is easy to grasp. Even by relatively young children.

      The idea is not to confuse the understanding of principles with their applications, as those can be (and are) horribly complex.

      Math is not hard. Math is very elegant and simple. Much like language, the same words that are in children's books also comprise the classics.

      --
      ..don't panic
    17. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here in the USA we do NOT want geniuses, we want good factory and office workers. Mediocre will not challenge authority.

      I've shared this and I'll share it again (and again...) but when I was in third grade I had an asshole, authoritarian teacher who I believe was only at my school for a couple of years. He was a lazy, arrogant, abusive asshole. When one was done with one's work one was to literally lay one's head down on one's desk and wait quietly for the other children to finish. I was in trouble on numerous occasions for "looking at the other children". I wrote so many lines I had wrist problems before I ever owned a computer or even discovered masturbation.

      Sadly I did not have rich parents, so I had to suffer through the waste of time that the American Public School system is.

      I went to a private school for a couple of years, before my parents broke up and there wasn't enough money because my dad was a deadbeat. I was about to be learning algebra, I was learning Spanish (I had great retention back then, and I never forgot some of the words I learned back then... though "ferrocarril" does have a fantastic ring to it, no?) and so on. Then I was placed literally into kindergarten due to my age and went from actually learning at a satisfying pace to being told lies about American colonization, making flags out of construction paper and placing Dead-President's-Head's stickers on them, and the like. After a year of that I spent two weeks in first grade before being bumped up to second, where I was still doing work inferior to what I'd been doing in my previous school.

      This is the problem here in the USA. If you are smart, you have a sack put over your head to slow you down to match the rest of the other students.

      Especially if you are smart, but your parents are dysfunctional and can't teach you how to blend in because they know fuck-all about how social situations work.

      College I slept through and aced it, at least they were not morons requiring me to turn in worthless busy work.

      Alas, I discovered life about the same time I went to college for the first time and besides, by that time I was prejudiced against education. What really shat upon my educational aspirations at that time, though, was a counselor who suggested I take a fully practical case load and save my electives for later. If I could remember who that was, I would send them a picture of my asshole right now. Hated it. Made school just a big bore of a chore. Most counselors don't give one tenth of one fuck about you as a person or even as a student, you're just a convenient unit that can be used to fill out slightly empty classes. What, am I bitter? Why do you ask?

      Now I have a two-year degree from going back to school much later, but it wasn't convenient for me to matriculate to a four-year at the time and now what do I do with this extra piece of paper? It's too crisp to be good bumwad.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    18. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Teach your kid about 'x' and abstract thinking in relation to rates of change. The rest follows quite naturally. (QED)"

      There fixed that for ya.

    19. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by mikael · · Score: 2

      Path of a projectile at the Earth's surface without air resistance in a uniform gravitational field is a parabola (or quadratic curve). Go into Earth orbut and you also get ellipse curves.

      Air resistance would slow horizontal and vertical velocity by a fraction per unit of time, so I would guess that it is an integral of a power sequence.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    20. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by 2.7182 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is a venerable math joke you've made. I've been hearing colleagues call it the Anus of Mathematics for 30 years now. It does publish great papers, but does require something of a personal connection to get into. Something remarkable you don't hear about in the press ever. Same for The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and a few others. But no big deal now. The internet is a great equalizer, although you'll get a better raise if you publish in the Annals, or better job offers.

    21. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Dolphinzilla · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have to agree with your comment about learning DE, I failed differential equations the first time I took the class (a D-grade) I was taking engineering course work at the time that required them - and what they actaully "meant" clicked in an electrical networks class - when I took the class again (my university had a 1 time grade forgiveness policy) I got an A - it seemed trivial and simple the second time around in a different context. I general I have mathematics makes mroe sense to me personally when I can relate it to a real world problem - Mathematics taught as rote learning is a horrible thing - some of us can't do it that way....

    22. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Here in the USA we do NOT want geniuses, we want good factory and office workers. Mediocre will not challenge authority."

      Exactly. And I tell you, is the same thing here in Brazil.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    23. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The american school system is designed to DISCOURAGE this.

      No, it just sounds like you got some crappy teachers. There are some reasons why there are more crappy teachers around than they should be, but it is not some scheme to hold back smart people. The administrators don't sit around saying, "Gee, we aren't doing enough to hamper smart kids," as they have other, bigger problems on their mind. Lack of options for brighter kids often just come from lack of resources, lack of attention on that issue, or just not knowing what to do. Kind of one of those cases of don't attribute to malice what can be attributed to ignorance or apathy.

      And this is not universal to public schools in the US. When I wanted to learn algebra in late elementary school, my teacher tracked down a high school teacher that could help. The school district let me take high school classes in middle school, since fortunately high schools opened a little more than one period in time before the middle school, and all they had to do was add a stop to a middle school bus route at the high school. And they already had a system in place for high school students to take discounted college and university classes (although in a case or two, students did that because the college course covered less advanced material than the particular high school teacher, so it was actually an easy path for a subject or two). It was not like every teacher was an amazing source of knowledge, but it was at least helpful for some of them to respond to advanced students with, "I don't know what to do as I don't know that material or how to cover it. I'm open to ideas you have if you want to try to go further," or, "Here is my text book from college, which I don't remember so I can't be of much help, but maybe you can pick up stuff beyond what I teach in class."

    24. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by the+gnat · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...it does publish great papers, but does require something of a personal connection to get into... Same for The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

      Actually, this isn't so true of PNAS any more. One of the previous editors decided in the late 1990s to raise the quality prestige of the journal by accepting more papers through a traditional peer-review route, as opposed to NAS members "communicating" or "contributing" articles (which would often have minimal peer review). This was very successful, and now most articles in PNAS get in through the front door, and they're slowly eliminating the back doors. The overall quality is pretty good - not as high-impact as Science or Nature or some of the top specialty journals, but it's definitely a journal that researchers are excited about publishing in if they can't get into the top tier. The fact that they're not part of Elsevier or one of the other big commercial publishers, and their open-access fee is very reasonable, is an added bonus. (Disclaimer: I've published there, so I'm not entirely unbiased.)

      Now, as with any journal, knowing the right people always helps - sadly, this is true at any level.

    25. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by plover · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Exactly. As a kid, I had a dog that understood when I threw a ball up on the roof of our garage, which caused it to disappear from her sight, that it would roll along the slope of the roof and and reappear further down the roofline. She actually got fairly good at predicting where the ball would reappear, repositioning herself along its path over time so she would meet it at its eventual drop point. Does that mean my dog understood calculus, or solved Newton's problem? Well, she recognized a pattern and was able to apply a repeatable solution.

      That tells me that the brain is capable of recognizing complex patterns around us, and is actually already very capable of deriving and applying practical solutions. ("So easy a dog could do it.") Applying abstract mathematical models to them, however, is not so easy.

      What I'd be most interested in in this whole saga is "what methods did his father use to teach him math?" Obviously they were highly effective.

      --
      John
    26. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by plover · · Score: 1

      I have evidence to the contrary. As I posted above, I had a dog that would watch me throw a ball onto a sloped roof, where it left her sight. It then rolled along the slope of the roof in an arc and returned to sight a few seconds later, further down the roofline. She became quite good at positioning herself under the spot where the ball would eventually reemerge and drop to her.

      It obviously doesn't mean she understood the calculus or formal proofs. It does demonstrate that mammalian brains are capable of taking in some facts of movement and making predictions based on them. It's not all that surprising in a dog. They are descended from animals that hunt cooperatively in packs, where they learn that some of the pack will drive prey out, and others know to run ahead to where the prey will likely flee to, even though they aren't always following them with their eyes.

      --
      John
    27. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we were to consider a child catching a ball to be equivalent to performing calculus, we'd have to say the ball is doing calculus as well, to calculate its own trajectory.
      Just because an action can be modelled by calculus, that doesn't mean the performer has any understanding of mathematical concepts.

    28. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alongside all that, what I noticed in high school was the few teachers with the talent and interest to engage with students got assigned to the remedial level classes.

      I clearly remember trying hard to learn despite my bad math instructor by visiting one of these good teachers I'd had previously. He told me that he couldn't help me with the work because it put him in a bad spot.

      My asshole was so bad that our Calculus class made up the Calculus night-class at the local college. That was too much hypocrisy for me, and I finally gave up. Dropped out, went to a trade school. I was well into my 30s before I found out math is actually pretty interesting and I had some talent for it. It was a total waste.

      (This was before the Web, or even decent science television. Being stuck in a factory town in the 70s meant I had no exposure to smart people before the exotic import of Omni magazine. Ten years earlier with the Space push, or ten after with home computers, I would have had a straw to grasp.)

    29. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by plover · · Score: 2

      Yes, I'm much more interested in the story of how his dad taught him so well and effectively than I am in the solution itself.

      And while I'm sorry you had such a crappy experience in public school, you might be heartened to know that not all public schools are equally horseshit as the ones you were unfortunate enough to attend. We have some absolutely stellar schools around us here, with teachers that actually care, and they try hard to challenge the kids to reach above their "expected potential". Not every school, mind you, but many of the ones in our district are excellent. I think it helps to have schools large enough to have multiple classes per grade level, which means they can offer a whole class or two of remedial addition to the kids who need that, several classes of algebra and trig to the majority of students, and a class of calc 1 and calc 2 to the kids who want that challenge.

      Sadly, I know that your story is far too common. I have a friend who grew up in California public schools, then due to family circumstances had to take his senior year of high school in a Kentucky school. He went from an 11th grade pre-calc class to basic math in 12th grade, complete with scarily stupid students and teachers. (I don't know where in Kentucky he was.) With no challenges in school, (and suddenly being dropped into a foster family situation,) he found himself in the classic teenage rebellion scenario, and discovered plenty of ways to get into trouble. It was fortunate for him that he had only one year to suffer through the bad school before he got into a college, which certainly helped him get his life back on track.

      Private schools aren't always the answer either, by the way. There are some well known parochial schools around here that deliver some pretty mediocre educations.

      So my advice is don't judge all public schools based solely on your own experience. Like most other things in life there are good ones and bad ones out there, and any responsible parent needs to be very selective where their kids go.

      --
      John
    30. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm... I was under the impression that you paid PNAS to publish your work because it was shit that you couldn't get published in a real journal.

    31. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by tomhath · · Score: 1

      Most confuse the trivia of solving problems (knowing many rules) and how to apply them with understanding of basic mathematical principles.

      I wish I had mod points for you. IMHO, the biggest problem students face when learning mathematics is teachers who don't really understand the basic principles (or don't know how to teach them), so instead they spend weeks and months teaching and testing boring trivia.

    32. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto. I didn't quite breeze through calculus in highschool, but I wasn't interested enough to really enjoy it and don't remember ever learning the motivation behind it. Later I took an electronics course and it all clicked. Glorious!

    33. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was doing advanced Geometry and Algebra at age 8, yes I'm a slow fool compared to this kid. but it's mostly the quality of teachers (his dad) and the willingness to keep giving a kid what they want and challenging them.

      The american school system is designed to DISCOURAGE this. Smart kids are told to be happy with the A they got without trying. If they challenge their teachers knowledge they are told they are wrong. Mostly because Grade-High-school education in the USA is simply following a lesson out of a book and not teaching it from an expert. the Gym teacher teaches computer class, The English teacher teaches Chemistry, and all of it creates a ho hum boring as hell experience for the children.

      Here in the USA we do NOT want geniuses, we want good factory and office workers. Mediocre will not challenge authority.

      yes I am jaded at the education system here. I was one of them that got bad grades because the teachers were idiots. I challenged my math teacher who could not believe that a kid can do multiplication and simple geometry in his head. I proved it on several occasions, but I was given failing grades for not doing the busywork of writing it all out. Plus I refused to learn his technique. It sucked and was harder than what I was using that came from college text books. So I ended up being a pissed off moody kid hating the education system because all I saw was idiots and morons trying to tell me they knew more than Me and I knew that they were wrong. I was reading at a 14th grade level when I was 12 years old. I read 1984 and understood the concepts and hidden meanings. I was devouring Vonnegut with a passion. I was told that the books were "too grown up for me" Everyone talked down to me and all it did was piss me off.

      Sadly I did not have rich parents, so I had to suffer through the waste of time that the American Public School system is. College I slept through and aced it, at least they were not morons requiring me to turn in worthless busy work. It was in college where I ran into real education, educators that actually knew what they were talking about and would actually hold a discussion with me and help me learn more.

      This is the problem here in the USA. If you are smart, you have a sack put over your head to slow you down to match the rest of the other students.

      At school you learn to be good at learning, lying and giving people what they ask for, instead of what's best. In other words; perfect example of reality training.

      Now, if you want to actually challange yourself to leverage knowledge, than by all means you are free to learn and research for yourself. You don't need teachers, so fsck them. They didn't teach Einstein that E=MC^2 or anything; because school teaches bare minimal skills that is certified with a piece of paper, which shows you are at least competent of the following...

      Stop confusing school with smart stuff, because school, by definition, is teaching stuff that has already been found out by people who weren't taught what they had to discover, to the masses.

      If you realy are so damn smart, than you don't even need schooling. If you can't make it without a piece of paper, then I hate to break it down to you, but; you aren't smart.

    34. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by abigsmurf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The number of times I read rants against (maths) teachers for holding back students and then halfway through it they drop "just because I don't show my working!" bombshell.

      Teachers are doing this for your benefit, not theirs. If you can hand in your homework with just the answers and get them all correct, great, but if you hand in the homework and get some wrong, the teacher won't have any idea where you went wrong, whether you used the wrong method when solving it or if you just made a simple error with the arithmetic. 99.9% of kids, even the ones who think they don't need to show their working because they know to do it, will at some pointstruggle with something and need help.

      The UK exam system drills this into you pretty early, only 1 mark out of 3 or 4 being awarded for the correct answer, the rest being awarded for the method used. By the time you get to A-level (High school) maths, you're even given the answer beforehand and asked to "show that x = 5".

      Ultimately the working out is usually more important in maths than the answer. You won't win a Fields medal for "Fermat's late theorem : it was correct. The end"

    35. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by acid06 · · Score: 2

      I'm also from Brazil and I share the feeling... sadly, I think it's the same thing everywhere in the world.
      I guess we're entering the next Dark Ages of knowledge...

    36. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      No criticism of you, I also failed to realize that I could educate myself if I chose to do so. For a bright, ambitious child with access to an adequate library, teachers are superfluous.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    37. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      science is like poetry
      it's not a race
      it's a joyful feeling of freedom!

    38. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My father had a book on brain development and nutrition. From 0 to 3 I ate no commercial food. At 3 he began teaching me arithmetic's.
      At 4 BASIC and algebra's
      At 5 geometry and electricity
      Had he continued my education instead of the fucking public school system I would have learn calculus instead of being humiliated by the dumb bitch teaching to 1st graders who thought that I was retarded.

      After an IQ test shown them that I was the exact opposite of what the bitch was claiming, the school sent me to see a psychologist. He first, ask me why did I refused to obey to the teacher. I replied why should I listen to someone who is demonstratively^1 less intelligent and knowledgeable then me. But surprisingly that psychologist had an acceptable answer to that, he basically told me: You do not have to agree with what you are told nor do you to really have to comply. But since every day of my life I will be surrounded by people dumber than me in position of authority; that would be better get used to it now by projecting an image of compliance than to be in prison at 20. His brutal truth had me understand society and I have faked compliance since then ;)

      1- I asked that stupid bitch what is be the length of the the hypotenuse of a triangle that have a 45 degrees slope, a side measuring 3cm and a side measuring 4cm, the answer is evidently 5cm... but she says 7 and refused to understand Pythagoras saying that it is not primary school level, it was 7 she was certain and that we should not question her "knowledge", how can you have respect that ?

    39. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

      I think that you're absolutely correct in that mathematics requires some kind of actual grasp of the relationships being expressed by the maths.

      For you it had to be something you could relate to a real world problem. I'm almost the opposite - I have to get something distilled down to pure abstract relationships before I feel I really get it. But either way, you have to do some work and understand what is being expressed by the maths.

      I studied cryptography a while ago, and I had some difficulty working through the maths. I got really stuck at one point in the course material and had to ask for help. The professor responded that they'd fudged that part of the maths a bit to avoid confusing people, and they didn't think anyone would get that far into the maths. He also gave a perfectly clear explanation of the source of my confusion - providing the missing bit of information about the relationships involved in the math.

      I was left amazed at the realisation that most people pass this stuff without actually understanding it in any real way.

    40. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      A major league outfielder (baseball) can determine where the ball is going to land without having to constantly adjust. He still has to visually track it to make fine adjustments since it is relatively small and very fast moving - just arriving at the spot wouldn't be enough to catch it. Visually tracking also allows correction for dynamic atmospheric conditions.

      A basketball player is also able to predict with very close precision where his jump shot will land.

    41. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by JonySuede · · Score: 1

      I never learn how to do it manually, but I did understand i:.
      At that time I was in an EE school where a TI-92 was mandatory, the teachers selected problems unsolvable by the analytic solver of the calculator but solvable if you applied theirs successive discriminants method. I therefore implemented the techniques and outputted the reasoning and the text I had to wrote to answer to those questions. It took me 15 minutes to finish the exam. The professor surprised by the time I took to complete his 3 hours exam, took a red pen out of his pocket and to his sad surprise everything was right; there was no red on my answer sheets.

      He asked me how I accomplished that. I then told him about my software and he then said that I should really consider leaving EE for CS and asked me not to copy my program as it would require the university to redo a big part of their curriculum. I kept my end of the deal and he was right as I eventually got bored by EE and I effectively went into CS a year later...

      --
      Jehovah be praised, Oracle was not selected
    42. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by funfail · · Score: 1

      1- I asked that stupid bitch what is be the length of the the hypotenuse of a triangle that have a 45 degrees slope, a side measuring 3cm and a side measuring 4cm, the answer is evidently 5cm...

      This is an impossible triangle.

    43. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What we are forgetting in the USA is teachers are not outstanding one in their area of expertise. In the name of education degree, all useless 2.5 GPA or less are admitted and graduated as teachers. They don't have the aptitude, attitude and intuitive understanding of mathematics, yet teach this subject using some junk text book and use teacher's solution manual to get their solution. Parents don't care and say that their children will make "million of dollars" as sports hero or like Bill Gate et. al. and who needs these mathematics? Thus the parents do not confront the worst teachers or complain. I had met some of them and did take care them and got fired. Mathematics has to be enjoyed and taught as a language with its vocabulary, symbols and relational operators and generalisation regarding the relationship between two or more objects or two or more attributes of the same object. Unless every parent protest about the stupid teachers and day dreaming that their children without quality education will be rich, nothing is going to change. But countries in China, India or far east, survival dictates to excel and Roy et al come from there. If we use Finland model that makes the best of the best of students with GPA of 3.9 or more with extrovert fun loving attitude and enthusiasm to teach mathematics, USA will become a third world country. Of course like Finland they best of the best should be paid well too.

    44. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      being humiliated by the dumb bitch teaching to 1st graders who thought that I was retarded.

      If you told her you could get a 45-degree slope on a 3-4-5 triangle, perhaps she was onto something.

    45. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously, teaching methods did not the entire equation make. Nurture may not be king.

    46. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      A basketball player is also able to predict with very close precision where his jump shot will land.

      ... unless they've played for the Charlotte Bobcats...

    47. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I wrote so many lines I had wrist problems before I ever owned a computer or even discovered masturbation.

      I hear you, but the one nice thing about growing up just at the dawn of the personal computing age was that I asked my teacher if I could type my lines instead (on the computer), and they said, "sure." Ah, Command-V on a 128k Mac running MacWrite...

    48. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by brillow · · Score: 2

      I think you're right. Mozart was not a genius, and arguably not a prodigy. He was however raised in a house of means by the greatest musical pedagogue of his age who started teaching him music before the kid could talk. I've been teaching long enough (and not very long at all) to realize that any kid could be taught to do these things if they were raised in a stable home and taught intensively for many years. This kid doing this is no more impressive to me than 13 year old Chinese kids on the pommel horse. Any kid can be turned into a highly talented person (in a more or less limited skill-set) if they are given a lifetime of intensive and focused education in a healthy and stable environment.

      There are drawbacks though, as the kids immense mathematical powers came at the cost of good judgement in the area of facial hair.
      http://www.vip.it/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Shouryya-Ray-256x300.jpg

    49. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I was doing advanced Geometry and Algebra at age 8

      Martin Gardner's puzzles in old copies of Scientific American got me to that point as well (and I'm definitely no genius and had to work hard at University), approached the correct way a lot of things are simple enough for an interested 8 year old to understand. I was luckier with the education system (a public system far better funded than the US ones) and most of the teachers were prepared to actively challenge students that had passed beyond the coursework so that nobody sat around bored for too long. For example, the "fast" kids in grade 7 were sent down to the remedial classes to help other children with their reading, which also had the side effect of improving their ability to read aloud. Some classes of course sucked and the way calculus was taught just did not work.

    50. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Not many people are "self-starters", and most that are got some inspiration to be that way from somewhere. Also you have to know where to start and get some breadth of knowlege instead of just the details of that one cool thing.

    51. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Angry much? Try directing your own life dude
        We've all got it hard.

    52. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      C++ and Java were created to keep mediocre programmers from fucking up. This so they could code for corporate America. Any language that prevents you from making mistakes prevents you from developing innovative code. All that crap about reuse and and infrastructure was just that. If anything there is less reuse. Businesses don't want creative minds - they want people who will keep their head down, their mouth shut and churn out code. The word "University" is BS these days - they're tech colleges. Study literature, philosophy, logic, math, history, art and read everything you can get your hands on - don't bother to graduate, run guns to guys trying to overthrow some asshole dictator until your 40-year old plane falls apart, you end up in prison on an island a few miles off the coast of Venezuela, read a few books about mathematics and programming, and make a six figure salary for the next 20 years writing software for geneticists. OK, it doesn't always work out like that. But sometimes it does.

    53. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Concepts of mathematics (calculus) are actually very simple.

      Teach your kid about 'x' and abstract thinking in relation to rates of change. The rest follows quite naturally. (IMO).

      Sure, if you can figure out the "relation to rates of change" thing, then calculus is simple. BUT that is the hard part. That is something most people just can' grasp.Shoot most people have a problem grasping the concept of this 'x' thing, let alone its derivative. Throw in the fact that a derivative is different than most everything else you've learned in math, and it becomes a difficult concept.
      The same way pointers are beyond most peoples understanding. If you understand it, its simple. But getting someone to understand it is the hard part.

    54. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Here in the USA we do NOT want geniuses, we want good factory and office workers. Mediocre will not challenge authority.

      Life isn't a big conspiracy theory. I had some great public teachers that tried to push my. The problem isn't that USA doesn't want geniuses, the problem is having the resources to deal with them. You have 35 students to teach, who will teach, the 1 or 2 at either end of the bell? Or the 25-30 in the middle of the class?

    55. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Teachers are doing this for your benefit, not theirs.

      They are doing this to make sure you don't cheat. My teachers told me to "show my work." "I did!" I wrote down everything that needed to be written down... Or I would solve it a way differently than I taught it. "Well how do we know you did the work?" Uhmmm perhaps because I scored the highest score on the annual national math test? Who else am I going to copy from?
      It wasn't about helping you... it was about making sure you didn't cheat.

    56. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by treeves · · Score: 1

      Mozart's ability to compose was not something he got from Leopold, although perhaps playing the piano was. How many of Leopold's compositions have you heard? Not one of them comes close to what Wolfgang would do. True that would not have had the chance to develop without the his father's push to make him a great pianist. But many have been pushed to play the piano by their parents and how few have gone on to compose anything like the 41st Symphony.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    57. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Mozart was not a genius, and arguably not a prodigy.

      Well, if he wasn't then neither has anyone else ever been.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    58. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I was one of them that got bad grades because the teachers were idiots.

      Yeah, we get a lot of people like you on slashdot.

      It arises from a combination of high intelligence and Asperger's, which means basic social skills like not annoying your fucking teachers by being a smart arse are absent.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    59. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      No criticism of you, I also failed to realize that I could educate myself if I chose to do so. For a bright, ambitious child with access to an adequate library, teachers are superfluous.

      Yes, because the world's biggest library (the internet) has produced an abundance of self taught geniuses.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    60. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Teachers are doing this for your benefit, not theirs.

      They are doing this to make sure you don't cheat. My teachers told me to "show my work." "I did!" I wrote down everything that needed to be written down... Or I would solve it a way differently than I taught it. "Well how do we know you did the work?" Uhmmm perhaps because I scored the highest score on the annual national math test? Who else am I going to copy from? It wasn't about helping you... it was about making sure you didn't cheat.

      I'm sure your helpful and cheerful attitude won you many friends and admirers amongst the staff.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    61. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe instead of recognizing a pattern, your dog could hear the ball rolling on the roof.

    62. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We've all got it hard.

      Yeah, you're so broke you can't afford to log into slashdot. I feel for you man, here's a quarter, get a nickname.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    63. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by sco08y · · Score: 1

      I'll bet you that any 6 year old can solve the problem of where a ballistic projectile will be, even accounting for air resistance, in real time without a computer.

      Don't believe me? Toss them a ball. The rest is just notation.

      They don't have a general solution. Most small kids will have trouble catching a pop fly.

      But by your measure, they also have such a solid understanding of linguistics that they can parse a sentence and compose a grammatical sentence in response, on the fly.

      The human neuroskeletal system has some heuristics that are a substantial partial solution to that class of problems. In particular, how to recognize a parabolic arc. Training allows one to develop a technique to "cover" a projectile coming in from further away such that the parabolic arc can't be determined.

      The rest isn't "just notation", it's application to other domains.

      And you can see that, even without getting into notation, they can't apply the solution more generally. Most 6 year olds would have trouble, for instance, even teaching another person how to speak or catch a ball, beyond their built-in instincts to play and socialize. And it's only years of study before someone can become an effective baseball coach. And if you want to beat other teams, you probably need specialists who have really studied ballistics and medicine so that they can develop better techniques for catching projectiles.

    64. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, the method *is* the math. You're also required to show your work to prevent cheating, which is what most ranters are probably doing.

    65. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by qu33ksilver · · Score: 1

      Just one question- What do you do now ??

    66. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I guess playing piano would fit to what you described.

      but Mozart did a lot more than just playing piano, since the reason people remember Mozart is mainly instructions on what to play on a bunch of instruments. You can train "any kid"(not true either btw) to play Mozarts compositions but it's pretty hard to train anyone to compose his material.

      the picture looks pretty unreal/weird.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    67. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      I'd be surprised if the dog couldn't hear the ball rolling on the roof. Not that a dog wouldn't be able to do that trick without that, it makes it a lot easier.

    68. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by AnonyMouseCowWard · · Score: 1

      You know, most of it is not because of your education system, but because of your parents/environment?

      I also was doing algebra at age 8. How many schools, or school systems, teach that at that age? It's not an American problem at all. The fact that kid was taught calculus at age 6 only means he had great parents, and there is no way he was taught the math necessary for solving his problem in school.

      Now granted your school experience might have sucked, and having to apply and write down a technique for multiplication that you can do in your head is annoying, but that is also the point of giving you an education. Sure, the school system wants to produce good workers... because good workers fit in the society. If you were able to understand it, why wouldn't you apply it? Because you had a better way? What's wrong with understand the "bad" techniques? If you are open to understanding _all_ possible methods, that means you're a bright and intelligent person that is a curious about the world, in other words, someone worth teaching to. If you go back to your shell because you think you're special... well, that failing is yours, not the school system's.

      If you want your school system to cater to the top 5%, or the bottom 5%, consider attending special schools. If you don't have the money, consider learning on your own, like that Shouryya Ray kid. The public school system is there to make sure everyone is given a fair chance and a standard basic education, not for the geniuses to have special treatment.

      Now, on the other hand, if you want to start a debate on how to improve on the education system, let me propose a starting point: use tiers for public schools, with admission exams. Top students get into the top tier, but all schools are funded publicly. Would that work for you?

    69. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that you paid PNAS to publish your work because it was shit that you couldn't get published in a real journal.

      This was very frequently true until the last decade or so. In fact, there were always some very good papers in PNAS, but there was also a lot more junk. Peter Duesberg, probably the most famous (and most reputable, until he went crazy) scientist to argue that HIV does not cause AIDS, is (or was) notorious for contributing an article to PNAS every year - since he was already an NAS member since the 1980s, they had to let him publish there. Since the editor who made the switch to direct submission, Nick Cozarelli, was a colleague of Duesberg's at Berkeley, I wouldn't be surprised if there's a direct link here.

      Anyway, if the article says "communicated by" or "contributed by", that means it got in through the back door. Not all of these articles are crap, but many don't deserve to be there. According to the PNAS web site, 90% of articles submitted, and 79% of those published, are direct submission. I believe the "communication" route is now closed, but it is still possible to contact an NAS member directly and ask if he/she is willing to be an editor, in which case the footnotes will mention that the editor was "pre-arranged". The difference from before is that the peer review is more rigorous and the editorial board has veto power. I've done it both ways (as a minor co-author), and while I'd obviously feel better about getting in the front door, I can understand why we went directly to an NAS member in one case. Academic politics is a bitch.

    70. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Java, maybe, but C++ was NOT created for mediocre programmers. It was created to ease the creation of large systems without sacrificing efficiency. C++ does NOT protect you from yourself.

    71. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      The american school system is designed to DISCOURAGE this.

      No, it just sounds like you got some crappy teachers. There are some reasons why there are more crappy teachers around than they should be, but it is not some scheme to hold back smart people. The administrators don't sit around saying, "Gee, we aren't doing enough to hamper smart kids,"

      No, it's designed to discourage this. By testing out of a couple of math courses and then taking Algebra II and Geometry at the same time, my younger brother completed the school district's highest-level math course (Advanced Placement calculus) in 10th grade (thus forcing the school district to pay for two years of university math instruction). The next year, the school district changed the prerequisite structure in the math program to make it impossible to take AP calc before 12th grade.

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    72. Re:Explain the mind of a genius? by CSMoran · · Score: 1

      No criticism of you, I also failed to realize that I could educate myself if I chose to do so. For a bright, ambitious child with access to an adequate library, teachers are superfluous.

      Yes, because the world's biggest library (the internet) has produced an abundance of self taught geniuses.

      It hasn't, but doesn't this simply reflect small numbers of "bright, ambitious children"?

      --
      Every end has half a stick.
  3. terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article itself is mathless. It doesn't tell you what the solution was, or even present the exact problem that was solved.

    1. Re:terrible article by sco08y · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The article itself is mathless. It doesn't tell you what the solution was, or even present the exact problem that was solved.

      And running a search for the kid's name turns up the same article fifty fucking times over. Google did some work on link farms... they need to do some work deduping / despamming press releases.

    2. Re:terrible article by johnsnails · · Score: 1

      Yeh Im sorry about the article, thats why i submitted to /. wanted other people to weigh in on the discussion, and maybe find some better links.

    3. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose if you were so inclined, you could search for the title of his paper that's displayed on his laptop in this picture.

      http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/05/26/article-2150225-134DF83D000005DC-214_634x741.jpg

    4. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      With all due respect to this brilliant student, I wouldn't worry too much about that - the problem isn't actually solved until its been peer- reviewed and thd other mathematicians agree that his approach is correct.

    5. Re:terrible article by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1, Funny

      The answer was 42 . . . now what was the question?

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    6. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Indeed. The German title of his work is "Analytische Lösung von zwei ungelösten fundamentalen Partikeldynamikproblemen", and his Wikipedia (!) article says something about linear damping and collisions, but I have not been able to find his "paper", neither of the homepage of his school nor anywhere else. It almos seems like there is something to hide.

    7. Re:terrible article by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      News.com is one step away from the onion, in the wrong direction.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    8. Re:terrible article by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Informative

      You are right. This article is awful, conveying no sense of the nature of the problem or its complexity, and giving no idea of the solution at all.

      The only equations I'm aware of for a falling particle subject to air resistance take the form

      m v' = -mg -a*v-b*v^2

      which is a constant coefficient Riccati differential equation for the velocity v. I'm reasonably sure this would have an analytic solution.

      Maybe complications arise in the 2D motion case, or perhaps the problem includes a particle which is also spinning. Maybe the drag terms take more complicated forms. I don't know. The article is pretty dreadful to be honest.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    9. Re:terrible article by Smurf · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's "Analytische lösung von zwei ungelösten fundamentalen Partikeldynamikproblemen" or, in English, "Analytical solution of two fundamental unsolved problems of particle dynamics".

      But that doesn't seem to be a paper published in a peer-review journal, but rather the title slide of a presentation he gave on March 1, presumably when when he received the Jugend Forscht ("Young Researchers") award.

      And the kid is Indian, not German (as long as we can tell from the article).

      And this is a problem in Physics, not in Mathematics. It shocks me that people get that mixed up.

      And the kid looks 30 years old, but I would never hold that against him.

    10. Re:terrible article by jairob · · Score: 2

      How does Slashdot accept such a crappy post?!

    11. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neat. I'm surprised Ernst Mach didn't get this already, but I guess that shows how much I ever covered the subject.

      I suspect it wouldn't give that exact a solution anyways. (In real world scenarios, air is chaotic with turbulence and thermals, differences in air density with humidity, etc.) But what it should give you is an idea of the maximum deviation from the ballistic path possible when air-resistance is factored in. May not be able to bullseye with this knowledge, but you will know what kind of spread to expect when shooting for that bullseye.

      I'm curious if this accounts for different projectile shapes, whether it's stabilized by spin or fins, or is simply a free tumbling projectile.

      I'm also curious when different ballistic trajectories result in the same end point, is it the low or high ones that has the most precision? (Probably the most useful thing this math will tell you. Although common sense says the low ones cover the least distance, therefore they should have the least deviation.)

    12. Re:terrible article by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Google did some work on link farms... they need to do some work deduping / despamming press releases.

      Google News has a decent deduping system going on.
      Google Search... not at all.

      Also, the kid's name is Shouryya Ray
      Not Shouryya Ra[missing letter here]

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    13. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is a problem in Physics, not in Mathematics. It shocks me that people get that mixed up.

      Well, physics is just applied maths, you know.

    14. Re:terrible article by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 2

      How does Slashdot accept such a crappy post?!

      I believe they welcome this stuff with open arms, and add an obscure summary with sensational headline to boot.

      And slashdotters tear it aprt even while complaining. Win-win for everyone.

    15. Re:terrible article by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Google should index the three sources every news site gets its articles from, and filter out all of the copies on sites who buy their articles.

    16. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The one dimensional equation given does have an analytic solution (and in fact it isn't very hard, just a little intricate to integrate).

      As you rightly suggest, it is the two dimensional problem that is a lot harder. As far as I know there is no exact solution; though perhaps Mr. Ray has found one. Indeed, Herman Goldstine in his magisterial "The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann" states that the reason why Americans during the war worked on computers was primarily to find solutions to this problem, so that artillery could be properly aimed.

    17. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the kid is Indian, not German (as long as we can tell from the article).

      Perhaps his mother is a German so that he received the German citizenship as well? The article only suggests that his father is an Indian.

    18. Re:terrible article by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1

      It's possible that he has dual citizenship, but that seems unlikely given that he only arrived in Germany 4 years ago and didn't speak any German at the time. 4 years would be a bit short for him to receive citizenship otherwise.

      None of the German newspaper articles I found refer to him as German, so I'm inclined to think it's simply an error in the article.

    19. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something like this?

    20. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This isn't just your ordinary "kid solved fundamental problem" article that you see every other month. This is the politically correct version, implying that diverse (a.k.a. non-white) immigration is good for non-diverse countries. Really, I'm surprised that people on Slashdot are criticizing it. Looks like political correctness is finally falling apart.

    21. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point of note: this problem is in the intersection of math and physics. You're just as wrong as the article.

    22. Re:terrible article by jordan314 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I was pretty disappointed that Slashdot wouldn't find the equation for this. I ended up finding it on reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/u7551/teen_solves_newtons_300yearold_riddle_an/c4sxd91

    23. Re:terrible article by equex · · Score: 1

      r/askscience is probably a place most slashdotters wanna go when they've read all the slashvertisments.

      --
      Can I light a sig ?
    24. Re:terrible article by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Yeh Im sorry about the article, thats why i submitted to /. wanted other people to weigh in on the discussion, and maybe find some better links.

      I think it was a fair submission. I'm just annoyed at the copy-pasta policies of many news outlets.

    25. Re:terrible article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither India or Germany allow dual citizenship, though Germany does allow it for under 22s. Basically, to become German he would have had to return his Indian passport.

  4. I thought these were pretty much known already by us7892 · · Score: 1

    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...

    1. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is no problem solving the equations numerically. This kid found analytical solutions to the equation of motion (or at least, that's how I read TFA). Punching in the exact solution is faster and more accurate than taking a zillion small but discrete steps, which is what you're stuck doing right now. Well, that depends on the complexity of the solution, but as a general rule...

    2. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Lord_Jeremy · · Score: 1

      I'm slightly confused as well. In my high school AP calculus-based physics class we did projectile motion with air resistance and gravity at the beginning of the year. In fact, my teacher used that particular topic to "weed out" the students that probably wouldn't be able to handle the remainder of the course. He taught the material way above the actual AP requirement and make the topic exam so hard that a few kids switched into the lower-level physics course afterward.

    3. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Lord_Naikon · · Score: 1

      Finding out where a projectile lands given a certain initial angle and velocity is a lot easier than finding out at what angle to shoot given a certain destination and velocity. I guess he found out how to do that because I was unable to solve it myself (when the total force on the projectile is dependent on its velocity).

    4. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, since when weren't there already precise analytical solutions to this? Gravity is a constant vector force downward, air resistance is proportional to the square of the velocity and opposite to that direction, plug it all into f=ma and you get

      mg{0,0,-1} + -k((d/dt)x)^2 = m(d^2/dt^2)x

      where x is position vector. Express x as a function of t, set initial conditions from starting velocity, integrate and yer done. Have I forgotten something? (It has been a while...)

    5. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You forgot a lot of things:
      -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.
      -air resistance is not constant either. It depends on air pressure which varies with altitude as well.
      -air resistance is not perfectly proportional to v^2, especially at transonic and supersonic speeds.
      -if the projectile is spinning, it may cause a net aerodymamic force in a direction other than -v. Like a curveball.
      -the earth is a spinning frame of reference, which results in various annoying effects.
      -the air is not necessarily stationary. Wind exists.
      and so on.

      But we don't know whether this dude accounted for any of this stuff or not, because the goddamn article doesn't tell us.

    6. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... you forgot an exact solution; numerical integration does not count.

    7. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Sique · · Score: 1

      You forgot that not only the length but also the direction of the resistance vector is changing, depending on the velocity.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    8. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, since when weren't there already precise analytical solutions to this? Gravity is a constant vector force downward, air resistance is proportional to the square of the velocity and opposite to that direction, plug it all into f=ma and you get

      mg{0,0,-1} + -k((d/dt)x)^2 = m(d^2/dt^2)x

      where x is position vector. Express x as a function of t, set initial conditions from starting velocity, integrate and yer done. Have I forgotten something? (It has been a while...)

      You've forgotten to actually give the analytical solution to this differential equation.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    9. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      "-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.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    10. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You appear to be unaware what the word analytical means.

      It's a problem where you plug in the initial numbers and out pops the answer. You don't need to do integration. a+b=c.

      A differential equation finds an approximation which may be very very close, but it is not an analytical solution.

    11. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      All of which is very well known and (nearly) trivial to simulate. I presume what he did was come up with a *closed form* solution.

           

    12. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So? Why should we care about scales less than ten miles? All the interesting action is a larger scales.

    13. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2

      Because it's freakin' cannon balls. I don't know about you, but I'm concerned on a scale less than ten miles.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    14. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by WillHirsch · · Score: 1

      You appear to be unaware what the word analytical means.

      It's a problem where you plug in the initial numbers and out pops the answer. You don't need to do integration. a+b=c.

      A differential equation finds an approximation which may be very very close, but it is not an analytical solution.

      You appear to be unaware what the word solution means (hint: it's not a problem).

    15. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Exoman · · Score: 1

      Interesting timing. I was just talking with my wife about how amazing it is that a 10 or 11 year old kid in the outfield can solve this problem in the outfield in the moments after a ball is hit, and then run to that position to catch the ball. There is a lot of correction happening until the catch, but the main calculation is pretty quick. Also note that most kids step IN as their first reaction, even when it's going to be over their heads, but the good ones do not, and they track the ball amazingly well.

      This includes top & bottom spin, lateral spin (slice & hook) on the ball, and other interesting complexity. While the visual pickup and transfer to the computer are very difficult for a computer, it is bordering on trivial for a competent ball player.

    16. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Funny, I find anything on a Macro Scale to be boring and predictable.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    17. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      for any calculations on a scale less than 10 miles

      Of course, many, many uses for extremely accurate ballistic equations are on a scale exceeding 10 miles... For example, the 16 inch guns on WWII battleships had a range of 26 miles.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    18. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by copsi · · Score: 2

      Solving that differential equation analytically (as opposed to numerically) will yield an analytic solution to this problem. Also, accounting for the initial conditions is part of solving an equation. A differential equation itself does not give an answer (neither exact or approximate) - you have to solve it using some method (which can be exact, approximate or numerical).

      The right hand side of the closed form solution might also include integration (eg if there are some integrals which cannot be represented using elementary functions), infinite series etc and it would still count as an analytic solution (although I suppose it depends on the exact definition of "analytic solution"), even though evaluating it for some particular point in time (in this particular case) can not be done exactly (you would have to numerically evaluate the integrals etc).

      Granted, as has been pointed out, GP has not provided us with an analytic solution to that equation.

    19. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      The OP was referring to the altitude of the shell, not its range.

    20. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      Many of those cannot be accounted for though.

      Atmospheric conditions such as gusts of wind and air pressure are not exactly knowable at the moment the projectile will encounter them. Any solution would have to assume some level of uniformity.

    21. Re:I thought these were pretty much known already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so true !

  5. Applicable Real Genius Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "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."

  6. Specifics? by Rie+Beam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.

    1. Re:Specifics? by Neil_Brown · · Score: 1

      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.

      Looks like he's just invented the recursive puzzle!

    2. Re:Specifics? by Slippery_Hank · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The problem he solved is determining the exact path of a projectile, when accounting for air resistance. The drag coefficient for air resistance depends nonlinearly on velocity, so when it is included in the model the equations become difficult to solve (previously impossible, but apparently now done. Though I haven't found any links to his actual work). Here is an example of setting up the problem, and then solving it numerically.

    3. Re:Specifics? by HeLLFiRe1151 · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is an article from 1983. I believe it explains the problem.

      http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev.fl.15.010183.000245

      --
      I've got 101 mod points and you can't have them!
    4. Re:Specifics? by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      Yes, a link hidden by a redirector posted by an anonymous account... what could possibly go wrong if I clicked it?

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    5. Re:Specifics? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If you have the right extensions installed, nothing — by clicking on it you'd see that it redirects to Slashdot, and can decide to follow the link ...

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    6. Re:Specifics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should try Bing

    7. Re:Specifics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Draw the free body diagram for the cannonball. Include air resistance. You get 2 non-linear ODE's. Not obvious how to solve such an animal. Presumably the kid found a clever way to solve them. I wonder if he's stumbled on a special case of a more general technique for solving non-linear equations? If so ... that's a big deal.

    8. Re:Specifics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm brave.

      It points back to the parent post.

    9. Re:Specifics? by black3d · · Score: 1

      Is it wrong that I found page 15 arousing?

      --
      "The true measure of a person is how they act when they know they won't get caught." - DSRilk
    10. Re:Specifics? by loom_weaver · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here's a post where someone determined what the original equations were and verified Ray's answer (in the picture of him holding a solution) in Maple:

      http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/u7551/teen_solves_newtons_300yearold_riddle_an/c4szejb

    11. Re:Specifics? by FrootLoops · · Score: 1

      Is it wrong that I found page 15 arousing?

      Only if you're gay. (Seriously, the pictures look like boobs and such.)

    12. Re:Specifics? by Sqr(twg) · · Score: 1

      Thank you for this! So to summarize (assuming this is his solution. I'd still like a link to something written by him that includes the equations.)

      He considered the 2-dimensional problem of a projectile under influence of gravity and a frictional force that is proportional to the square of its speed.

      He "solved" it in the velocity (u,v) plane. To get the (x,y) trajectory you'd have to integrate in time (which would be tricky because you don't have u and v as functions of time, see below).

      The "solution" is a function f(u,v) that is constant on the trajectory. It does not tell you u(t) or v(t). In fact, t is not in f. Nor does it give you an expression for u(v) or v(u), because f can't be inverted analytically. For any of that, you still have to do numeric calculations.

  7. The reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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!

  8. Difference between Germany and the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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).

    1. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 0

      There's nothing wrong with the American economy -- what's wrong I think is that we have a culture that success leads to happiness. In fact, neuroscience and psychology points the opposite direction: happiness leads to success. If we could grasp that one fact we'd all be better off.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    2. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by couchslug · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Americans are very RELIGIOUS, and "critical thinking" is sin.

      "Fruit of knowledge" and all that.

      Superstition is what keeps humans backward. It plays to their most degenerate desires for controlling others on a mental level. It is based on falsehood, and should be constantly scorned and ridiculed in order to reduce the number of new converts.

      If any adherents can PROVE their imaginary friend is real, I'll recant and suck his/her/it's Noodly Appendage, but until then fuck off.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    3. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 2

      "In fact, neuroscience and psychology points the opposite direction: happiness leads to success. If we could grasp that one fact we'd all be better off."

      That's philosophy. Let's stick to the facts: what can a math or physics genius become in the US? Maybe a university professor, making 100-150 K$ a year. Or maybe the R&D leader of a major company, but the salary would be nearly the same, the only way to get "rich" would be with stock options, which depend on factors that have nothing to do with R&D (marketing makes a company more profitable than R&D). An hollywood weirdo makes 10 millions per movie instead.

      That's the obvious consequence of the mighty law of "supply and demand" that nobody wants to oppose: people are retarded and spend lots of money to go to the movies rather than financing scientific research. That's the "demand", so the "supply" will act accordingly. And who doesn't agree with this system is considered a "communist".

      Now, who's more useful to mankind, a physicist or an actress? If answering "a phycicist" makes me a communist, well I'm proud to be one.

      No, that's not philosophy. That's science. The facts are on my side, not yours. Read "The Happiness Advantage" for details. I'm not denying supply and demand, arguing that a physicist makes more than Tom Cruise (although in general physicists make more than actors), or anything else you might think I'm saying. I'm saying as a matter of fact, based on good science, that the human brain is generally more productive and powerful when it's happy, which leads to increased success, but having success does not reliably trigger happy brain states.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    4. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Superstition is what keeps humans backward. It plays to their most degenerate desires for controlling others on a mental level. It is based on falsehood, and should be constantly scorned and ridiculed in order to reduce the number of new converts.

      So, your grand strategy for fighting religion is to simultaneously give the adherents something harmless to feel martyrs over and make the whole thing seem like a cool, dangerous counterculture to potential young recruits?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    5. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by steelyeyedmissileman · · Score: 2

      If any adherents can PROVE their imaginary friend is real, I'll recant

      Proofs exist, and many people could provide the proofs. It wouldn't do any good, however, because you'd just wave it off.

      The problem isn't with the proof, the problem is with the AXIOMS. Very good and convincing proofs of the existence of God are there, if you take a particular set of axioms as the basis for your outlook. That's the faith part.

      It's a real problem in our world today that people take math and science as gospel. Everyone seems to forget that all of math and science are based on axioms, things that we assume must be correct because there's no way to prove it. We have to make those assumptions, though, to do anything at all. You might say "well, so far nothing has shown those assumptions to be wrong, so we must be right!", but that's only good to a point. Newton's law of gravity is correct, but only if you assume a Euclidean geometry. Is that correct? Well... not exactly... but that doesn't make Newton's laws worthless; many models we run on today rely on those principles which aren't, technically, true.

      So I'm sorry, but I decline to offer my proofs. If you'd like to talk axioms, on the other hand, that might be a more interesting (and fruitful) conversation.

    6. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by eulernet · · Score: 1

      In fact, neuroscience and psychology points the opposite direction: happiness leads to success.

      I don't know where you read that, but psychology and neurosciences (there are several) will never be able to show that, because happiness and success are totally unrelated !

      Firstly, because you need to define what success is. If success is living a life doing a lot of things, you'll get a rich life, but probably not a wealthy one.
      If success is making a lot of money, it just means that you tend to take risks, it's like betting your life on your choices.
      The risk of getting unsuccessful is greater than the risk of getting successful.
      In any case, I don't see how this can lead to happiness.
      Happiness is not related to comfort, money or other external results.
      A poor guy is probably happier than a rich guy, because his happiness will not depend on money, while the rich guy will focus his life on work and money, and it's impossible to succeed your life personally and at work.

      Secondly, because if your happiness is related to success, it means that if you fail, you are unhappy.
      When you fail, it means that you need to understand the lessons of your failure, and try to correct this.
      Perhaps should you not take risks in the future ?

      Please, stop reading/listening gurus who try to sell their method to become rich and happy. They are just marketeers, who sell themselves.
      The happy guys never brag about being happy.

    7. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1

      Well similar articles appear in US media whenever some kid has early success in science or technology. As evidenced by the fact that this piece of news has even made it to Fox.

      I would agree in general that Germany doesn't suffer quite as much from anti-intellectualism as the US, but it's not a black and white scenario, either.

    8. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      In fact, neuroscience and psychology points the opposite direction: happiness leads to success.

      I don't know where you read that, but psychology and neurosciences (there are several) will never be able to show that, because happiness and success are totally unrelated !

      I'll just quote myself from another post here which you probably missed. I'm saying as a matter of fact, based on good science, that the human brain is generally more productive and powerful when it's happy, which leads to increased success, but having success does not reliably trigger happy brain states. Clear enough? For just one study, see Lyubomirsky, S., King, L. & Diener, E. (2005) The benefits of frequent positive affect: Does happiness lead to success? Psychological Bulletin, 131, 803-855.

      Firstly, because you need to define what success is. If success is living a life doing a lot of things, you'll get a rich life, but probably not a wealthy one. If success is making a lot of money, it just means that you tend to take risks, it's like betting your life on your choices. The risk of getting unsuccessful is greater than the risk of getting successful.

      It's a good thing to think about. I define success in the dictionary definition: the favorable or prosperous termination of attempts or endeavors.

      In any case, I don't see how this can lead to happiness.... blah blah more stuff to show you missed my point entirely.... The happy guys never brag about being happy.

      Read my post again. I did not say that success leads to happiness. You are arguing against a straw man.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    9. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're spending our weekend news cycles praising this, actually.

      It is astonishing just how completely people like you have been filled with hate. Even worse is why your response to a story with no controversial aspects at all, couched in your malcontent world view, is given kudos.

    10. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by eulernet · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't miss your point, your message was not very clear.

      Thanks for the article, it contains a lot of information, but mostly statistical.

      The goal of our life is to live a happy life, but a lot of people focus on getting wealthy instead.

      Frankly, success or failure are not very important, as long as you can be happy.

    11. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      OK, I can buy that my post was not clear. If you are more interested in the subject and wish to explore more causal and interesting studies, please look at "The Happiness Advantage." I cannot find my copy at the moment, or I'd cite some of its studies. It's on Amazon and it's cheap and a good read. I would quibble with your argument that success and failure are not very important. They are sometimes important and sometimes not. What's skewed in our present culture is our insistence than every success and failure is a measure of the worth of the people seeking their results. That itself works against happiness. I also would say as a footnote that happiness is measurable, definable and achievable. And to attain it might be called a type of success, no? Thus showing that some successes are important. :-)

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    12. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by eulernet · · Score: 1

      Here is a good read, and it's free:
      http://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k29669&pageid=icb.page135336

      About measure, I disagree, I know EQ, but I don't like too much the principle.
      I'm for the zen approach, which is to let your thoughts pass, we are unhappy because of our thoughts.
      As long as we are in the instant present, we live fully.
      I like the zen quote: "When I eat, I eat, and when I sleep, I sleep".
      Whatever (positive or negative) happens at me is a lesson, what can I learn from it ?
      Can I unlearn my bad thoughts' habits, that took so much time to acquire ?
      This is the secret of happiness.

    13. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the interesting link. I will see if I can find time to read it. A casual perusal shows me nothing there about happiness, though. I have not spoken of E.Q. and am not a fan either -- it's an interesting but outdated idea, I think, modeled on another inadequate idea: I.Q. That is not the measure of which I speak. I'm talking about observing the human brain and human behavior that precedes and apparently causes people to report themselves as happy. These things can be measured and reported. Also, we can observe the human brain with increasing fidelity and see what this thing "happiness" is in other terms to see what more can be understood about it.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    14. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by daemonenwind · · Score: 1

      You need to read more German media.

      For example:
      http://www.bild.de/lifestyle/startseite/lifestyle/lifestyle-15478526.bild.html

      For counter example, I would note that ESPN will be covering the Scripps National Spelling Bee this year.

      Perhaps your perspective on this has more to do with you than with Germany or the United States.

    15. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by eulernet · · Score: 1

      The link is about Positive Psychology, and it's Ben-Shahar's course (mentioned in the book you mentioned, I'll read it when I'll have more time).

      EQ is interesting in order to measure what kind of coping we are able in our relationships.
      Epstein's book about "Constructive Thinking" seems a lot more interesting than EQ.

      I have my own personal approach, because I started with a psychoanalysis while practicing some caycedian sophrology, I experienced the different levels of consciousness.
      I stopped doing psychoanalysis because I realized that it reinforced the mental process of thoughts.
      I had my peak performance moment (winning a national championship), then had to take familial responsibilities (my wife is in a wheelchair).
      All these events changed me deeply, but I still don't believe in brain.

      I have a large IQ (>140), and I realized that obsessing about IQ is useless.

      My deep belief (thanks to sophrology and zazen) is that my "reality" is a small point in my body located around my belly button.
      The brain is just a sense, like vision, audition or smell. This sense is working with thoughts.
      So what we are studying with brain is not what we truly are, but how this sense works.
      A lot of our brain illnesses originate from our belly bacteria (like multiple sclerosis). They may attack the brain when our brain has problems coping with reality.

      IMHO, observing the brain behaviour is less important than discovering our "true" nature.

    16. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your thoughts and the leads on other thinkers. Yes, I've read some Ben-Shahar, but not Epstein, and the Happiness Advantage is by one of his students as I recall. I understand what you mean by not believing in brain, and I agree, as well as taking your point about MS and, perhaps, implicitly epigenetics and mind-body. I personally identify more with an idea of mind-body that itself is an illusion formed from dualist thinking. I have not seen anything that makes me believe that we truly are anything in particular in the sense you seem to mean. "There is no dance and no dancer, there is only you dancing." Your measured IQ is larger than mine and your achievements are as well, congratulations. :-) I am sorry for your wife's trouble and can see you love her. Speaking of M.S., if your wife by chance has that ailment, then have you seen or heard of Dr. Wahls' diet?

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    17. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by eulernet · · Score: 1

      Luckily, my wife doesn't suffer from MS, but she has to lose weight in order to be operated (hips replacement).
      One of my old friends suffers from MS (he introduced me to sophrology and meditation, because he wanted to lessens his disease), but I guess he's dead now :-(

      About my achievements, there are none, except perhaps a boost in self-confidence.
      I didn't get wealthy because of my work, but I did a massive burn-out during 8 years of my life (while working in the videogame industry), but I'm now pretty happy, even though life is always tough, but so full of lessons and meaningless at the same time.

      About the duality concept, I agree with you, but I believe that I'm still "something". Trying to find its location may solve this duality.
      I also think that the cycle of reincarnations stops when you removed all your beliefs, even the belief of reincarnation, it's quite recursive ;-)

      Recently, I've stopped trying to understand myself and the others. Trying to understand reduces yourself, instead of trying to push your own limits.
      I realized that I was limitless, but I'm also very lazy, so I doubt I'll ever get rich, except internally.

    18. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever lived in Germany? They have their celebrity idolatry and reality show trash as well. Take a look at Bild Zeitung--the best selling "newspaper" in Germany--and get back to me about how cultured the Germans are compared to Americans...

    19. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by Guy+Harris · · Score: 2

      The problem isn't with the proof, the problem is with the AXIOMS. Very good and convincing proofs of the existence of God are there, if you take a particular set of axioms as the basis for your outlook. That's the faith part.

      So does that, ultimately, amount to "you will be convinced of the existence of God if you make assumptions about the world that require the existence of God"? Unless there's a non-faith-based reason to make those assumptions, the proof isn't going to be convincing to people who don't make those assumptions, making it just an entertaining exercise for those who happen to make those assumptions, not something to take seriously as a reason to believe.

      It's a real problem in our world today that people take math and science as gospel. Everyone seems to forget that all of math and science are based on axioms, things that we assume must be correct because there's no way to prove it. We have to make those assumptions, though, to do anything at all. You might say "well, so far nothing has shown those assumptions to be wrong, so we must be right!", but that's only good to a point.

      Yes, math is a subject where you start with a set of axioms and derive theorems from it, and all that matters is whether the axioms are consistent (i.e., one axiom doesn't contradict another) and, for any theorem, whether derivation is correct.

      Science, however, is not such a subject. One might think of a particular scientific theory as having axiom-like assumptions from which one derives theorem-like predictions (although they're not necessarily stated in a mathematical form). However, the theorem-like predictions aren't just proven; they have to be tested against the real world. This means you don't get to choose your axioms arbitrarily and still have your theory taken seriously; if its predictions don't match the real world, you're not likely to be taken seriously unless you can show that there's something wrong with the experiments done to test the predictions.

      Newton's law of gravity is correct, but only if you assume a Euclidean geometry.

      Well, more accurately, Newton's laws of motion, as laid out by Newton, involve motion in a Euclidean space, and Newton's law of gravity, as laid out by Newton, involves a gravitational force in that space, whereas Einstein's general relativity involves special relativity-style laws of motion in a space-time that might be curved by the presence of matter, so that, the paths of matter not affected by (non-gravitational) forces being "straight lines" (geodesics) in that space-time, those paths might be affected by the presence of matter. However, Newtonian gravity can be formulated in a fashion similar to Einsteinian gravity, curved space and all.

    20. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by couchslug · · Score: 2

      "So I'm sorry, but I decline to offer my proofs."

      Then you have no evidence you dare produce for debate.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    21. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      I agree we are something. :-) The duality occurs because of the looking but is not there in reality, I think. All dualities are simply a function of a distinction drawn by an observer. Evolution has taught us to value patterns and we classify them to communicate, but the classification is an artifact of mind. Or so it all seems to me. :-) Reincarnation seems to be another attempt to see beyond the grave, which is futile from what I can tell. Beyond death all is just confusion -- I suspect this is because there is no "beyond death." We cannot comprehend our own annihilation. And that's the big mystery to me. That I comprehend at all, and cannot comprehend not comprehending anything. :-)

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    22. Re:Difference between Germany and the US by fr!th · · Score: 1

      I read /. at least twice a week, for the last ten years or so. And congratulations, you + parent are the first one I can remember who has summed up the 'science vs. religion' subject in a relatively objective fashion. At least, that is how you started. I have long thought this was true:

      "The problem isn't with the proof, the problem is with the AXIOMS. Very good and convincing proofs of the existence of God are there, if you take a particular set of axioms as the basis for your outlook. That's the faith part.

      So does that, ultimately, amount to "you will be convinced of the existence of God if you make assumptions about the world that require the existence of God"? Unless there's a non-faith-based reason to make those assumptions, the proof isn't going to be convincing to people who don't make those assumptions, making it just an entertaining exercise for those who happen to make those assumptions, not something to take seriously as a reason to believe."

      But few consider the implications of this. IMHO, faith by *definition* is axiomatic. One doesn't prove the existence of God/Supreme Being, one *assumes* it. But the converse is also true. One does not 'disprove' or 'disbelieve', rather one assumes 'lack of existence'. The two statements are mutually exclusive, and both based on faith.

      I think the thing that ends up tripping both sides is that, starting with *either* axiom (does exist/doesn't exist) you can produce our world. That is, there is nothing that requires a 'Supreme Being', but also nothing that precludes it. This is why some scientists believe and others don't - because it doesn't affect the outcomes of your experiment or how you reason about it. Its a philosophical axiom, and therefore unprovable in any sense.

      Just had to add my $0.02 - you guys made my day!

  9. Mispelled name in TFS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His name is Shouryya Ray.

    1. Re:Mispelled name in TFS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      His name is Shouryya Ray.

      You can call him Ray, or you can call him Jay. . .

  10. are those problems NP? by zome · · Score: 0

    "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.

    1. Re:are those problems NP? by geoskd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problems he solved are not NP. They are essentially calculus, but they are both very nasty calc problems, and the traditional way to solve calc problems is using newton approximations until the answer is close enough to what you want. An analytical / precise way to solve these problems is extremely useful to the physics folks, as the solution will probably also lead to better models of particle motion.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    2. Re:are those problems NP? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      This is not a decision problem so the P-NP complexity classes do not apply.

    3. Re:are those problems NP? by EMN13 · · Score: 2

      While P/NP is indeed pretty way offtopic here, P vs. NP doesn't necessarily apply solely to decision problems. Furthermore, many problems can be rephrased as decision problems; e.g. Does the cannonball need more than 10 second to complete its flight?

      For a traditional P/NP example: the traveling salesman problem is about finding the shortest path, which is also not a decision problem.

    4. Re:are those problems NP? by doshell · · Score: 1

      You're entirely correct, but I would add the following. You can rephrase non-decision problems as decision problems, but the computational complexity of the two versions may not be the same. As an example, even if you had a polynomial-time algorithm for the decision problem version of TSP, it would not be obvious at all whether you could use it to solve the shortest-path version in polynomial time, since the number of distinct path lengths in a graph is exponential in the general case.

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    5. Re:are those problems NP? by doshell · · Score: 2

      I've just realized that my example is wrong, because it seems to me that for the shortest-path version of TSP you can get away with a binary search over all the possible lengths (since the length of a path is upper bounded in a finite graph), which is just a (polynomial-time) iteration over the decision problem. I'm fairly certain that my comment on the differing complexities is true in general, but I'd rather someone else chime in with a correct example :)

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    6. Re:are those problems NP? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      P, NP etc. DOES apply solely to decision problems: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NP_(complexity). The definition requires it.

      Many problems, such as the travelling salesman problem, can be posed as decision problems, and when people talk about those being in NP, they are talking about the decision problem formulation.

  11. Solutions already existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  12. When in Doubt... by Rie+Beam · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...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

  13. Re:Shouryya Ray, a 16-year-old Kolkata boy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So basic grammar is used to emphasize his origin? Really?

  14. skeptic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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.

    1. Re:skeptic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other part of skepticism with this matter, is whether some government defense department had already solved this particular problem for ballistics testing, but chose to keep the solutions internal rather than exposing it to foreign governments. This type of solution seems like it would help long-range ballistics work properly, which could help eliminate the need for larger missiles, such that we could have some Hollywood sniper action (perhaps without curving bullets). It will be interesting to see the effect of this solution, if it is a legitimate solution.

  15. Wolfram Alpha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Man, he just went home and popped up Wolfram Alpha, what's with all the fuss?

  16. Military by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For god's sake don't let him work for the military, who are probably reaching out to him now.

    1. Re:Military by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Banking and Financial industry is more like it

    2. Re:Military by wdsci · · Score: 1

      For one thing, the military doesn't automatically classify anything that is relevant to them. But also, the problem of projectile motion with air resistance was already solvable by computer simulation, and it will continue to be solved by computer simulation. This result doesn't change that, it's just some interesting physics.

  17. Gotcha! by Rie+Beam · · Score: 4, Informative

    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."

    1. Re:Gotcha! by Rie+Beam · · Score: 4, Interesting

      On a sad note, he only placed 2nd in the overall competition :(

    2. Re:Gotcha! by imbusy · · Score: 1

      It seems like no one simply bothered doing it before him because everything is done much easier numerically. And you can do a lot more with numerical integration (account better for the environment) than this one specific case of the problem could ever handle.

    3. Re:Gotcha! by St.Creed · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Number one cured cancer AND solved the world's energy problem. That's hard to top. :)

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    4. Re:Gotcha! by WillHirsch · · Score: 2

      It's hardly worth even doing numerically. Within the 85km thick shell where the atmosphere behaves anything like a Newtonian fluid, Earth's gravitational field strength only varies by about ±1.5%. The difference between any application of the analytical solution and the equivalent constant-g solution will be dwarfed in real life by chaotic atmospheric conditions. I suspect that as a differential equation with an unusual combination of second-order polynomials, there isn't much else you can transfer the solution to either.

    5. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Informative

      That helps a little, but still doesn't really clarify completely what he did. I'll explain a little about what I know about the projectile problem and what I can figure out about what he might have accomplished here.

      In the Principia, Newton poses three closely related problems. One is projectile motion under the influence of a frictional force that's proportional to velocity (book II, section I). Next he considers the case where the friction is proportional to the square of the velocity (book II, section II), and finally the case where it's of the form av+bv^2, where a and b are constants (book II, section III). Let's call these cases 1, 2, and 3.

      Case 1 is pretty straightforward. The x and y motions are decoupled, and each of the motions is governed by a first-order, linear, inhomogeneous equation.

      Case 2 is actually of more physical interest than case 1 for most real-world projectiles. For example, when you toss a baseball in air, its Reynolds number is about 10^4 or 10^5, and in that regime, a force proportional to v^2 is a pretty decent approximation. There is a well known closed-form solution for the one-dimensional subcase (I actually had a student a few years back who figured it out for herself, which was impressive), which is y=A ln[cosh(t sqrt(g/A))].

      A hint is that this page has a photo of him holding up a large sheet of paper with his closed-form solution on it. The equation is clearly visible, and reads g^2/(2u^2)+(alpha g/2)[v sqrt(u^2+v^2) / u^2 + arsinh |v/u|] = const. The notation isn't explained, but clearly u and v are the components of some vector, probably the velocity vector. If so, then the constant alpha has to have units of inverse meters.

      This makes me think that what he's solved is the full two-dimensional version of case 2. It can't be case 3, because besides g there is only the one constant alpha appearing in his equation. If you write down the equation of motion, a=F/m=(mg-bv^2)/m=g-(b/m)v^2, the constant that naturally occurs is b/m, which has units of inverse meters. It also makes sense that his solution has a hyperbolic trig function in it, since the y(t) for the one-dimensional version of case 2 has a hyperbolic trig function in it.

      If my interpretation is right, then you should get a correct one-dimensional result from his equation when u=0. Unfortunately his equation blows up to infinity in that case, so I'm not sure how to extract any sane interpretation from it. By setting alpha=0, you should also get the case with zero friction. That does sort of make sense, since it says u is a constant, which it should be in that case.

      It would be interesting to see if my interpretation is right by doing a numerical simulation and seeing if his expression really does seem to be a constant of the motion.

      One thing to point out is that he may not have actually solved the full problem as set by Newton. He hasn't found the equation of the trajectory in closed form (which I think was what Newton was most interested in), and he also hasn't found the position in closed form as a function of time. (This is all assuming my interpretation is right.)

    6. Re:Gotcha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're right, he's demonstrated a constant of motion (i.e. a first integral) in the 2D version of Newton's Case 2. The constant alpha in his equation is what you called b. Gravity points in the -v direction.

      You can easily check this by differentiating his equation with respect to time, and then eliminating the derivatives of u and v using the expressions

      du/dt = -b u sqrt(u^2 + v^2)
      dv/dt = -b v sqrt(u^2 + v^2) - g

      His solution can probably be extended to Case 3 quite easily, if anyone feels like a challenge :)

    7. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Doing a reply-to-self because I checked my interpretation using a numerical simulation. I wrote some python 3 code, which does a reasonably realistic simulation of a baseball being hit for a home run. Slashdot's lameness filter wouldn't let me post it, so I put it here: http://ideone.com/yeP4y

      The results:

      u= 36.86184199300463 v= 25.810939635797073 Ray= 0.07075915491208162 KE+PE+heat= 147.825
      u= 30.646253624059415 v= 12.467830176777555 Ray= 0.07075939744839914 KE+PE+heat= 147.82340481003814
      u= 26.608846983666997 v= 1.6625489055858707 Ray= 0.07075957710355621 KE+PE+heat= 147.8224303518585
      u= 23.559420165753 v= -7.761841618975968 Ray= 0.08597247439794412 KE+PE+heat= 147.82171310054588
      u= 20.86163826256129 v= -16.094802395195508 Ray= 0.10413207421166563 KE+PE+heat= 147.82115230900214
      range= 120.88936569485678 , vs 194.17117929504738 from theory without air resistance
      u= 18.25141606403427 v= -23.242506129076933 Ray= 0.12066666645699123 KE+PE+heat= 147.8207286473949
      u= 15.70673363979356 v= -29.088976584679852 Ray= 0.1353850869274781 KE+PE+heat= 147.8204307883206
      u= 13.30143766684643 v= -33.65200048062784 Ray= 0.14867603720136566 KE+PE+heat= 147.8202356199746
      u= 11.11267911406159 v= -37.07517115834146 Ray= 0.16096016949002218 KE+PE+heat= 147.8201144079141
      u= 9.186200956690504 v= -39.564763699985484 Ray= 0.17255826567110216 KE+PE+heat= 147.82004160975018

      The notation is that u and v are the x and y components of the velocity vector, "Ray" is the expression that Ray seems to be claiming is a constant of the motion, and the final column is the total energy, which should be conserved.

      I tested my code two ways: (1) Energy is very nearly conserved. (2) If I turn off air friction, the range is very nearly as calculated by theory.

      Let R be the expression that Ray says is a constant, under my interpretation of his variables. Then dR/dt appears to be very nearly zero early on in the simulation. However, later on it starts to drift upward. So I suspect that one of the following is true: (1) Ray is wrong; (2) my interpretation of his notation is wrong; or (3) my simulation doesn't use good enough numerical techniques to demonstrate with good precision that Ray is right.

      Anyone who's got Runge-Kutta, etc., on the tip of their tongue want to try a better simulation of this?

    8. Re:Gotcha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A hint is that this page [jugend-forscht.de] has a photo of him holding up a large sheet of paper with his closed-form solution on it. The equation is clearly visible, and reads g^2/(2u^2)+(alpha g/2)[v sqrt(u^2+v^2) / u^2 + arsinh |v/u|] = const. The notation isn't explained, but clearly u and v are the components of some vector, probably the velocity vector. If so, then the constant alpha has to have units of inverse meters.

      This makes me think that what he's solved is the full two-dimensional version of case 2. It can't be case 3, because besides g there is only the one constant alpha appearing in his equation. If you write down the equation of motion, a=F/m=(mg-bv^2)/m=g-(b/m)v^2, the constant that naturally occurs is b/m, which has units of inverse meters. It also makes sense that his solution has a hyperbolic trig function in it, since the y(t) for the one-dimensional version of case 2 has a hyperbolic trig function in it.

      If my interpretation is right, then you should get a correct one-dimensional result from his equation when u=0. Unfortunately his equation blows up to infinity in that case, so I'm not sure how to extract any sane interpretation from it.

      In fact, if you multiply his equation through by u^2, then set u=0 you are left with g+alpha v^2=0. Similarly, setting v=0 you have g=const u^2 which is equivalent if const=-alpha and v=u. So it appears to not blow up.

      I'm not sure what it's really telling us though! v^2 is proportional to g? I think we need to know more about his notation.

    9. Re:Gotcha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot's lameness filter wouldn't let me post it

      How ironic.

      BTW, WTF are you doing here?

    10. Re:Gotcha! by c0lo · · Score: 1

      In fact, if you multiply his equation through by u^2, then set u=0 you are left with g+alpha v^2=0. Similarly, setting v=0 you have g=const u^2 which is equivalent if const=-alpha and v=u. So it appears to not blow up.

      I'm not sure what it's really telling us though! v^2 is proportional to g? I think we need to know more about his notation.

      Tells you that the KE and PE go hand in hand?

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    11. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      In fact, if you multiply his equation through by u^2, then set u=0 you are left with g+alpha v^2=0

      Not quite, because v sqrt(v) isn't v^2, it's v^2 sign(v). As the projectile approaches terminal velocity, your approximations hold, but with the sign flipped relative to yours, and the expression you've found equals (with a sign flip) the acceleration, which is zero. When the projectile has small u but isn't close to terminal velocity, your approximations fail (u isn't small enough compared to v).

      Similarly, setting v=0 you have g=const u^2

      Setting v=0 isn't physically interesting in the same way that setting u=0 is. There are physical solutions of the equations of motion in which u is constant and zero -- vertical free fall. There aren't physical solutions of the equations of motion in which v is constant and zero.

    12. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      You can easily check this by differentiating his equation with respect to time, and then eliminating the derivatives of u and v using the expressions

      du/dt = -b u sqrt(u^2 + v^2)
      dv/dt = -b v sqrt(u^2 + v^2) - g

      Awesome! I didn't want to grind out the calculus by hand, so I did it with maxima:

      load (f90)$
       
      r(u,v) := 1/(u**2)+v*sqrt(u*u+v*v) / (u*u) + asinh(abs(v/u)) ;
      /* Ray's expression, multiplied by 2, with alpha=g=1 */
       
      foo : diff(r(u,v),u)*u*sqrt(u*u+v*v) + diff(r(u,v),v)*(1+v*sqrt(u*u+v*v));
      /* total derivative with respect to time */
       
      f90('foo = foo);

      Unfortunately maxima wasn't smart enough to simplify it show that it vanished identically, so I had it output it as fortran code, and then tested numerically that it vanished with random numbers as inputs:

      double precision u,v,foo
      u = 0.3776
      v = 0.1209
      foo = u*sqrt(v**2+u**2)*(-abs(v)/(u*abs(u)*sqrt(v**2/u**2+1))-2*v&
      *sqrt(v**2+u**2)/u**3+v/(u*sqrt(v**2+u**2))-2/u**3)+(v*sqrt(v**2+&
      u**2)+1)*(v/(abs(u)*sqrt(v**2/u**2+1)*abs(v))+sqrt(v**2+u**2)/u**&
      2+v**2/(u**2*sqrt(v**2+u**2)))
      write (*,*) foo
      end

    13. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      Hmm...actually it only works for v>0, which is the reason for the goofy behavior I was seeing in this post. Notice how the numerical simulation shows Ray's expression as a perfect constant of the motion up until v becomes negative, and then it starts changing.

      This is because if you simplify the total derivative from this post, you don't actually obtain zero, you get (v/|v|-1)/sqrt(u^2+v^2), which only vanishes for positive v.

      So it looks like the expression shown on the big piece of paper in the photo is only for v>0. I don't know if there's some trivial modification that would generate a valid expression for the negative v case.

    14. Re:Gotcha! by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      Which, since we've been unable to track down the actual results, may simply indicate that what he did is much less impressive than some news reporters are making it sound.

    15. Re:Gotcha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This seems like the best explanation so far and your comment is also linked by the mathematical site, the aperiodical:
      http://aperiodical.com/2012/05/has-schoolboy-genius-solved-problems-that-baffled-mathematicians-for-centuries/

    16. Re:Gotcha! by martin-boundary · · Score: 2

      He's being a good slashdot commenter who's offering stuff that matters to the small contingent of us who have advanced maths degrees?

    17. Re:Gotcha! by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 1

      Cloned your code and added a classical fourth-order Runge Kutta. Here. There isn't really any difference, presumably because you used 100 000 time steps. The difference between Euler and RK4 is tiny for non-stiff problems and small time steps.

      So I guess either your interpretation is wrong, or he is wrong.

      --
      for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
    18. Re:Gotcha! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure I agree with this being case 2. I think it is case 1. According to bcrowell's message, case 1 is a "frictional force that's proportional to velocity." I agree with your equations "du/dt = -b u sqrt(u^2 + v^2)," and the other one, but notice the factor b is multiplied by the velocity "sqrt(u^2 + v^2)" rather than the square of velocity.

    19. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      You missed the other factor of u. The expression u sqrt(u^2 + v^2) gives the x component of a vector with squared magnitude u^2 + v^2 that points in the direction of (u,v).

    20. Re:Gotcha! by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      Cool, thanks for checking that! As explained here, what's going on is that the expression is only a constant of the motion for v>0.

  18. Re:Exceptional intelligence in ethnic sub-group? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The genes for intelligence/reasoning were probably selected for in India thousands of years before Aryan immigration/invasion.

  19. Re:Exceptional intelligence in ethnic sub-group? by Rie+Beam · · Score: 1

    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.

  20. Fermat & Poincaré by Bananatree3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Machtyn · · Score: 2

      It does seem pointless to me to use a computer to create a proof, except when using it to quickly calculate the known and already proven equations.

      Of course, that's coming from a guy who continually messes up a number or sequence here or there.

    2. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Chase+Husky · · Score: 5, Interesting

      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.

      Perelman's three primary papers ("The entropy formula for the Ricci flow and its geometric applications" http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DG/0211159, "Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds" http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DG/0303109, and "Finite extinction time for the solutions to the Ricci flow on certain three-manifolds" http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DG/0307245) on modifying Hamilton's Ricci flow program to deal with singularities and proving Thurston's geometrization conjecture only span 68 pages, with the actual proofs/meaningful remarks comprising about 45 pages of that.

    3. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aside from the pedantic corrections, thank you for correctly using "comprising". :)

    4. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by 2.7182 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, that is true but then after those papers appeared there was a several year effort by 3 groups to fill in the details and make it more digestible. Each of the resulting books/documents are several hundred pages long.

      Some problems just require longer proofs.

    5. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It seems pointless to you because you are totally ignorant of math. A lot of these "hundreds of pages of mind-numbingly dense mathematics" proofs are long but tedious derivations which a computer can grind through in seconds.

      If you're doing a half page proof that square root of 2 is irrational, then a computer would be pointless, but clearly you don't know that math is more complicated than that.

      And to head off potential flames, I completely respect people who want to and are able to work through those derivations by hand, but to think doing it with a computer is pointless just shows your ignorance.

    6. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually, it should be the other way around. The 45-odd pages comprise the actual proofs/meaningful remarks.

    7. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Dodgy+G33za · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is why I read /.

    8. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that's the number of pages he published. He probably filled a multiple of that number when he derived the proof, unless he's such a genius that he did it all in his head.

    9. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by nuckfuts · · Score: 2

      Number of pages is not a very meaningful measure. It is dependent on formatting. As anyone with an e-book reader knows, one can increase the number of pages of any document by simply choosing a larger font.

    10. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought a Chinese group were the first with a RIGOROUS proof...with Perelman scrambling in their wake to push out his own.

    11. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by djjockey · · Score: 1

      As anyone who had to turn in a paper with a page limit also knows... that and the spacing between characters, words and lines all helps!

    12. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by ais523 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Half a page? If (x/y)^2 = 2, then x^2 = 2y^2, so x is even. Let z = x/2, now we have 2z^2 = y^2, so y is also even. Thus, any fraction that's equal to the square root of 2 cannot be expressed in lowest terms, so cannot exist. That's, what, three lines at most?

      I agree with the main point, though; quite a few of the proofs I do are just boring churning through tens of possible cases. Up to 100 or so it's plausible to do it by hand, although tedious and it's easy to make mistakes; significantly beyond that, though, you're going to want to automate it.

      --
      (1)DOCOMEFROM!2~.2'~#1WHILE:1<-"'?.1$.2'~'"':1/.1$.2'~#0"$#65535'"$"'"'&.1$.2'~'#0$#65535'"$#0'~#32767$#1"
    13. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by brillow · · Score: 1

      To me it seems pointless do work in any inefficient way to the ends of pride.

    14. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 1

      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 fact that two guys with somewhat abnormal personalities (and I mean that as a general observation rather than any criticism, more normal people wouldn't have taken this approach) obsessively worked on pencil-and-paper proofs isn't really an indication that this is a good way to do things. If you can do the same thing with less effort on a computer (and a prime example of this is the four-colour theorem) then do it on a computer. Use the right tool for the job, not pencil-and-paper because you don't trust computers.

      (Oh gawd, please don't let this degenerate into a long thread about OCD and the like, I'm trying to point out that you need to use the right tool for the job, and if the right tool is a computer then go ahead and use it).

    15. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Darby · · Score: 1

      It does seem pointless to me to use a computer to create a proof,

      I believe the poster you're responding to meant something different.

      Say you have some complicated ("chaotic", maybe) formula which determines the behavior of a system. Say just to make it easy the system is a single particle moving under various influences. Now say you know where it is now (it's a big particle like a planet or something, so ignore Heisenberg and such) and you want to know where it will be 500 seconds later. Many systems currently require iterating through all 500 steps or other time intensive tasks in order to find that answer due to only having approximate methods with which to solve the system. An analytic solution as the OP was using it would be more like a function where you plug in 500 and get your answer. If you plugged in 500 Billion, you'd find that answer in more or less the same amount of time as for 500.

      So computers can potentially make taking the wetware time to find an analytic solution to an equation (system of differential equations, optimization problem etc.) less valuable in some of the meanings of the word, if in practical applications you can get say 10 decimal places closer to the answer than you need in microseconds.

      Computers proving theorems is a different thing. The Four Color Problem is the most common example of that I'm aware of. I think it's cool that people managed to do that, but it's unsatisfying in that it doesn't really add much in the way of understanding. Some theorems people have come up with are similarly unsatisfying.
      Existence theorems which demonstrate that a certain thing must exist in some given circumstances yet provide no clue whatsoever as to how to actually find it would fit. Also, brute force methods in general (which is what the four color proof is, only done via computer to save time) tend to leave mathematicians satisfied that the given fact is true yet still looking for a more elegant solution that provides greater understanding.
      Andrew Wiles's proof of Fermat's Last Theorem is fundamentally different in that it did (eventually) provide a huge degree of insight showing unsuspected ties between disparate branches of mathematics. Technically, Wiles didn't prove Fermat's Last Theorem, he proved the Taniyama Shimura conjecture (demonstrating a deep relationship between elliptic curves and modular forms) which someone else had proven would imply FLT if true.

    16. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. You say "clearly you don't know that math is more complicated than that," yet think a computer could do more complicated problems? This is not some difficult algebra problem that you can give to Mathematica. These are complicated logical problems that require a lot of the type of intuitive and subtle reasoning (which then takes a while to put into a logically consistent proof) that computers are incapable of doing. There are mathematical topics where computers can aid proofs by doing brute force calculations (the four-color theorem comes to mind), but these are few and far between.

    17. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Half a page? If (x/y)^2 = 2, then x^2 = 2y^2, so x is even. Let z = x/2, now we have 2z^2 = y^2, so y is also even. Thus, any fraction that's equal to the square root of 2 cannot be expressed in lowest terms, so cannot exist. That's, what, three lines at most?

      It's also not a mathematical proof.

    18. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by sco08y · · Score: 2

      It seems pointless to you because you are totally ignorant of math. A lot of these "hundreds of pages of mind-numbingly dense mathematics" proofs are long but tedious derivations which a computer can grind through in seconds.

      If you're doing a half page proof that square root of 2 is irrational, then a computer would be pointless, but clearly you don't know that math is more complicated than that.

      And to head off potential flames, I completely respect people who want to and are able to work through those derivations by hand, but to think doing it with a computer is pointless just shows your ignorance.

      Most importantly, if there are hundreds of pages of dense computation to prove X, if I'm writing a function and I have some invariant, I can just write a comment,

      "And invariant Y remains satisfied because of X, see the fun proof at..."

      I don't really give a damn about the details, It Just Works.

    19. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by doccus · · Score: 1

      Not much use with a word limit though..

    20. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by ais523 · · Score: 1

      Yes it is; it's bad practice to pad a proof out just so it looks more proofy when it genuinely is that simple.

      --
      (1)DOCOMEFROM!2~.2'~#1WHILE:1<-"'?.1$.2'~'"':1/.1$.2'~#0"$#65535'"$"'"'&.1$.2'~'#0$#65535'"$#0'~#32767$#1"
    21. Re:Fermat & Poincaré by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it is; it's bad practice to pad a proof out just so it looks more proofy when it genuinely is that simple.

      No it's not. There's no degree to proofy. Either you made it for enough or not. You didn't even start out right. You don't even state what x and y are! Sure I can guess, but if I have to guess, it's not a proof. It's just sloppy lazy school kid work.

  21. Problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with that interpretation is that just having those groups believe that about themselves would have that effect.

  22. So what is Newtons Puzzle? by rossdee · · Score: 1

    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.

  23. Flash journalism by yoctology · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

    1. Re:Flash journalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Agreed. I wish we could go back to the good old days of HTML + JavaScript journalism.

    2. Re:Flash journalism by thePig · · Score: 1

      Not in this case though.
      People re-engineered the solution and found the way he solved it - and it checks out -
      http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/u7551/teen_solves_newtons_300yearold_riddle_an/c4t03fl

      So, this is real.

      --
      rajmohan_h@yahoo.com
    3. Re:Flash journalism by FrangoAssado · · Score: 4, Informative

      Since we're linking to comments from Reddit: people also found out that this solution was known since at least 1860, and was published in a modern journal in as recently as 1977.

      It's great that a 16 year old discovered this, and it could have been a cute (but not as flashy) story. But the reporter didn't even bother to talk to someone familiar with the field.

  24. George Dantzig by tepples · · Score: 1

    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.

  25. This article is crap. The problem has been solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    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!

  26. Europe by Cinnaman · · Score: 0, Troll

    The benefits of not having IQ-lowering Fluoride added to your water... http://www.fluoridealert.org/iq-studies.aspx

    1. Re:Europe by Noughmad · · Score: 2

      So the crazy old guy in that movie with the long title was right all along?

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
    2. Re:Europe by redneckmother · · Score: 1

      So the crazy old guy in that movie with the long title was right all along?

      POE = Purity Of Essence = Peace On Earth.

      Grain alcohol and rain water!

      Funny, but when I was youger, there were times when we were warned not to make snow cones out of the snow, because of the atmospheric atom bomb tests.

      Oh yeah, and GET OFF MY LAWN!

  27. Re:Exceptional intelligence in ethnic sub-group? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, so Indians worship cows and their elite caste is named like the Fallout cows... There has to be a joke in there!

  28. Shouryya Ra = German? by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    I don't think so.... Aryan maybe, but not German.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  29. Re:This article is crap. The problem has been solv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then I found a solution in an old dynamics book

    [citation needed]

    really

  30. Gave Up by Frankie70 · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Gave Up by PNutts · · Score: 1

      Sugar Ray does not approve.

  31. Article did read, you did not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Indian-born teen said he solved the problem that had stumped mathematicians for centuries while working on a school project.

    hurr durr

  32. Pffffft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did it myself years ago, but the margin was too small to hold the proof,

  33. This bright Dude comes across as down to earth by quax · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:This bright Dude comes across as down to earth by Georules · · Score: 1

      Oh no, he's weak in graph theory and combinatorics? Only about 1% of college graduates even know what those things are anymore. He's clearly doomed.

  34. Is his last name Ray or Ra? by damn_registrars · · Score: 2

    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.
    1. Re:Is his last name Ray or Ra? by bef · · Score: 1

      If his name is Raj the Germans will pronounce it Ray.

  35. Glory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hope this kid gets plenty of glory from this, because other than his hand, he's not gettin' any sex, that's for sure.

  36. Did he solve the problem or did his dad help him? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  37. Kudos to the kid but... by PhilistineGuillotine · · Score: 1

    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.

  38. Military by glorybe · · Score: 1

    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.

  39. Journal pages or manuscript pages? by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1

    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?

  40. Germany is so desperate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They stripped the kid of his original nationality to take credit. What utter desperation they must be feeling to take credit.

  41. My dog solves this all the time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

    1. Re:My dog solves this all the time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No he doesn't. He calculates an estimate of where it will land, based on his best guess of the initial conditions, and the rough size of the margin for error on that calculation. Then he starts running towards the edge of the area within that margin. If he doesn't make visual contact with the ball again before reaching that area then he never gets to correct his estimate, and slinks back towards you, plotting his sweet, sweet revenge.

  42. 20 digits of precision ? by perpenso · · Score: 1

    "-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.

  43. +1 DUR! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  44. Just another kickass kid from Calcutta. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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?

  45. artillery can go 26 miles by Chirs · · Score: 2

    Unassisted shells have pretty decent range (26 miles or so), and specialty weapons can go even further.

  46. Artillery is going self guided ... by perpenso · · Score: 1

    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.

  47. Shoulda Woulda Coulda Example by retroworks · · Score: 1

    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
  48. Already on Wikipedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouryya_Ray

  49. "naivety" that's exactly it by Snaller · · Score: 1

    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
  50. The problem he solved?: by Jookey · · Score: 1

    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

  51. Shenanigans by darthlurker · · Score: 1

    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.

  52. I don't think it's by design by turing_m · · Score: 2

    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.
    1. Re:I don't think it's by design by turing_m · · Score: 1

      One additional comment - at the younger levels, you do not need a genius to teach a genius, provided that the teacher is smart enough to recognize a smart child and teach to his level. At higher levels this is certainly true though, whether that genius is present in person or as an author of a work (book, web page, video, game), the child learning autodidactically. Also, being able to break a given problem or skill down into all the component skills necessary to solve that problem, and teaching them in order - that in itself requires above average intelligence. Much more than is probably thought.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    2. Re:I don't think it's by design by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      You can't expect a school system to educate everyone equally effectively when you have thirty kids to one teacher. Particularly slow or quick pupils require additional help, and this basically needs to come from their parents.

      If you're that much of a genius, you will always be outside the norms that schools cater for, and you should be able to find your own way forwards anyway.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  53. Partial answers by david999 · · Score: 0

    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

  54. Too right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who do they think they are? Australia?

  55. Calling him a kid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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!

  56. I.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just wanna fly...

  57. I can only say I'm so jealous by lulipa · · Score: 1

    I'm good at math but my teacher tried to teach me calculus at age 16 and I couldn't understand shit.

  58. What, exactly, is the problem? by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    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.
  59. Re:This article is crap. The problem has been solv by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    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.
  60. Remember the old maxim... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When a man says "it's impossible" what he means to say is "I don't know how to do it."

  61. Skeptical by jk80D8 · · Score: 1

    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.

  62. Just another Europeans youth science competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  63. Indian Origin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The kid is from the great mathematical background, he is INDIAN.

  64. Ballistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great, I hope they'll use his proof to make more realistic Angry Birds releases.

  65. The German School System ... by twms2h · · Score: 1

    ... 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".

  66. Re:This article is crap. The problem has been solv by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    Ray's solution is an invariant during the trajectory. It doesn't really help with the integration, which is still to be done numerically.

  67. overhyped; not new, not a solution by bcrowell · · Score: 2

    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.

  68. Newton, 350 years? by dscheink · · Score: 1

    Perhaps next year Mr. Ra will solve one of Einstein's 120 year old problems.

  69. Over Hyped by Media? by nukenerd · · Score: 1

    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?

  70. Re:What is wrong with the native Europeans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  71. If this happened in America by davydagger · · Score: 1

    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.

  72. Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  73. Ray a genius or a challanger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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

  74. Typeface, not font! by Benfea · · Score: 1

    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.

  75. Where to find the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody have an idea or link to find this actual problem?