Questa è la pagina dedicata a Marcus Du Sautoy.
In questa pagina troverai 5 prodotti, tra cui “The Number Mysteries: A Mathematical Odyssey through Everyday Life”.
L’enigma dei numeri primi: L’ipotesi di Riemann, il più grande mistero della matematica
Le teorie impossibili. Quali sono i limiti della scienza?
In un’epoca in cui la scienza ci abitua a risposte su ogni tema, c’è qualcosa che non arriveremo mai a comprendere? Du Sautoy ci accompagna in un fantastico viaggio di esplorazione dell’ignoto, che parte da oggetti semplici e si addentra in sette moderni interrogativi scientifici. Così dal lancio di un dado possiamo affacciarci alla teoria del caos, e grazie al suono di un violoncello indaghiamo nella materia dei quark; possiamo avvicinarci alla complessità del tempo con un banale orologio da polso, e aspettare la prossima radiazione di un pezzo di uranio-238 acquistato online. O scoprire che si nascondono meno paradossi dietro un’intelligenza artificiale che in un nastro di carta arrotolato. Sette percorsi nel quotidiano per affrontare i quesiti che ci spingono ai confini della conoscenza, un termine ultimo tuttora lontano da raggiungere: la grande distanza ancora da percorrere è la scienza del futuro.
The Music of the Primes: Why an unsolved problem in mathematics matters
The paperback of the critically-acclaimed popular science book by a writer who is fast becoming a celebrity mathematician. Prime numbers are the very atoms of arithmetic. They also embody one of the most tantalising enigmas in the pursuit of human knowledge. How can one predict when the next prime number will occur? Is there a formula which could generate primes? These apparently simple questions have confounded mathematicians ever since the Ancient Greeks. In 1859, the brilliant German mathematician Bernard Riemann put forward an idea which finally seemed to reveal a magical harmony at work in the numerical landscape. The promise that these eternal, unchanging numbers would finally reveal their secret thrilled mathematicians around the world. Yet Riemann, a hypochondriac and a troubled perfectionist, never publicly provided a proof for his hypothesis and his housekeeper burnt all his personal papers on his death. Whoever cracks Riemann’s hypothesis will go down in history, for it has implications far beyond mathematics. In business, it is the lynchpin for security and e-commerce. In science, it has critical ramifications in Quantum Mechanics, Chaos Theory, and the future of computing. Pioneers in each of these fields are racing to crack the code and a prize of $1 million has been offered to the winner. As yet, it remains unsolved. In this breathtaking book, mathematician Marcus du Sautoy tells the story of the eccentric and brilliant men who have struggled to solve one of the biggest mysteries in science. It is a story of strange journeys, last-minute escapes from death and the unquenchable thirst for knowledge. Above all, it is a moving and awe-inspiring evocation of the mathematician’s world and the beauties and mysteries it contains.
Il codice della creatività: Il mistero del pensiero umano al tempo dell’intelligenza artificiale
The Number Mysteries: A Mathematical Odyssey through Everyday Life
From the author of ‘The Music of the Primes’ and ‘Finding Moonshine’ comes a short, lively book on five mathematical problems that just refuse be solved – and on how many everyday problems can be solved by maths. Every time we download a song from Itunes, take a flight across the Atlantic or talk on our mobile phones, we are relying on great mathematical inventions. Maths may fail to provide answers to various of its own problems, but it can provide answers to problems that don’t seem to be its own – how prime numbers are the key to Real Madrid’s success, to secrets on the Internet and to the survival of insects in the forests of North America. In ‘The Number Mysteries’, Marcus du Sautoy explains how to fake a Jackson Pollock; how to work out whether or not the universe has a hole in the middle of it; how to make the world’s roundest football. He shows us how to see shapes in four dimensions – and how maths makes you a better gambler. He tells us about the quest to predict the future – from the flight of asteroids to an impending storm, from bending a ball like Beckham to predicting population growth. It’s a book to dip in to; a book to challenge and puzzle – and a book that gives us answers.
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