Magician Turned Professor Talks About the Math Behind Shuffling Cards
An anonymous reader writes with this story about magician and professor of mathematics and statistics at Stanford University Persi Diaconis. "Now a professor of mathematics and statistics at Stanford University, Diaconis has employed his intuition about cards, which he calls 'the poetry of magic,' in a wide range of settings. Once, for example, he helped decode messages passed between inmates at a California state prison by using small random 'shuffles' to gradually improve a decryption key. He has also analyzed Bose-Einstein condensation — in which a collection of ultra-cold atoms coalesces into a single 'superatom' — by envisioning the atoms as rows of cards moving around. This makes them 'friendly,' said Diaconis, whose speech still carries the inflections of his native New York City. 'We all have our own basic images that we translate things into, and for me cards were where I started.' In 1992, Diaconis famously proved — along with the mathematician Dave Bayer of Columbia University — that it takes about seven ordinary riffle shuffles to randomize a deck. Over the years, Diaconis and his students and colleagues have successfully analyzed the effectiveness of almost every type of shuffle people use in ordinary life."
to complete randomness, is to leave an open pack sitting on the floor and let loose the kittens.
I'm a very special type of magician, I'm a MATH-emagician
Brady Haran on Numberphile has a series of interviews with Persi Diaconis: https://www.youtube.com/playli...
Elen sìla lùmenn' omentielvo
This topic might have warranted a video, considering it's a demo. It would sure beat all the "some dude talks about something for flipping forever" videos Slashdice keeps trying to dump on us instead.
Also, it is entirely possible, (if unlikely) that you can shuffle a randomized deck of cards into sequential order.
Random does not mean completely out of order, it means unpredictable. I can roll five dice and come up with a large straight (12345). The random comes from not being able to predict from the previous state (22222 Yahtzee!) what the next state (12356 chance) will be.
A perfect riffle shuffle is not a random process since you can observe the initial state (123456 e.g) and predict the result (142536). That's true for whatever the starting state is.