What about infinity? What about infinity times infinity?
-
Upload
quentin-carpenter -
Category
Documents
-
view
260 -
download
3
Transcript of What about infinity? What about infinity times infinity?
What about infinity?
What about infinity times infinity?
Infinity times infinity• Are all infinities the same?• Is infinity plus one larger than infinity?• Is infinity plus infinity larger than infinity?• Is infinity times infinity larger than infinity?
A former Math 210 project on large numbers
Ordered pairs• An ordered pair of numbers is simply two numbers, one listed before
the other:• (3,2), (3.14,2.71), (m,n)• An ordered pair of elements of a set is simply two elements of the set,
one listed before the other. For example, if the set is the alphabet then (a,b) is an ordered pair. (b,a) is a different ordered pair.
• Given any two sets A and B, the collection of all ordered pairs of elements, one from A then one from B, defines another set called the Cartesian product, denoted AxB
The number of rational numbers is equal to the number of whole numbers
Countable sets• A set is countable if its elements can be
enumerated using the whole numbers. • A set is countable if it can be put in a one-to-
one correspondence with the whole numbers 1,2,3,….
• Paradox: the Hilbert hotel
Any number between 0 and 1 can be represented by a sequence of zeros and ones
• Any number between zero and 1 also has a decimal representation
• In this case each digit takes the value between 0 and 9. • One divides [0,1] into 10 equal bins and assigns the digit
correponding to which bin contains x, • If x is not an endpoint then one repeats the process on 10(x -
and so on.• Example:• Note: in this case.• What about 0.99999….?
Binary representation of whole numbers
HereAlgorithm:Step 1: Find the largest power of 2 less than or equal to N. This is k.Step 2: If then done . Otherwise, subtract from N. Apply step 1 to stop when either the remainder is a power of two (possibly equal to one)
Example: Binary decomposition of N=27
• Question: Is there any relationship between the binary decomposition of N and of 1/N?
• Example: compare 3 and 1/3.
The numbers between 0 and 1 are uncountable.
In search of…Georg Cantor
• Ordinal number: 0,1,2, etc• Cardinal number:• 2^N: number of subsets of
a set of N elements• Number of subsets of the
natural numbers
• The “Continuum hypothesis”
Aleph naught
Clicker questionCardinal numbers refer only to numbers worn on the jerseys of St Louis Cardinals players•A – True•B - False
Clicker questionCardinal numbers can be infinite (larger than any finite number)•A – True•B - False
Clicker questionAll infinite cardinal numbers are the same size•A – True•B - False
Counting: some history• The first recorded use of numbers consisted of
notches on bones.• Humans used addition before recorded
history
Nowadays we use big numbers: • Numbers are represented by symbols:• 257,885,161-1 has 17,425,170 digits• To see: • 57,885,161/3.32193=17,425,169.7…• At 3000 characters per page, would take about 5000 pages
to write down its digits.• Very large numbers are represented by descriptions. For
example, Shannon’s number is the number of chess game sequences.
• Very very large numbers are represented by increasingly abstract descriptions.
• We use symbols to represent mathematical concepts such as numbers• Some number systems facilitate calculations and handling large
magnitudes better than others• The symbols 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 are known as the Hindu arabic numerals
Some ancient number systems
Cuneiform (Babylonians): base 60
Mayans: Base 20 (with zero)
Egyptians: base 10
Greeks (base 10)
Romans (base 10)
• Only the Mayan’s had a “zero”• Babylonians: base 60 inherited today in angle measures. Used
for divisibility.• No placeholder: the idea of a “power” of 10 is present, but a
new symbol had to be introduced for each new power of 10.• Decimal notation was discovered several times historically,
notably by Archimedes, but not popularized until the mid 14th cent.
• Numbers have names
Base 10• 2• 3• 4• 5• 6• 7• 8• 9• 10
Scientific notation
• Scientific notation allows us to represent numbers conveniently when only order of magnitude matters.
Powers of 10 • Alt 1• More videos and other sources on powers of
10
• Other cosmic questions
Orders of Magnitude• Shannon number• the number of atoms in the
observable Universe is estimated to be between 4x10^79 and 10^81.
Some orders on human scales• Human scale I: things that humans can sense directly (e.g., a
bug, the moon, etc)• Human scales II: things that humans can sense with light,
sound etc amplification (e.g., bacteria, a man on the moon, etc)
• Large and small scales: things that require specialized instruments to detect or sense indirectly
• Indirect scales: things that cannot possibly be sensed directly: subatomic particles, black holes
These are a few of my least favorite things
• Viruses vary in shape from simple helical and icosahedral shapes, to more complex structures. They are about 100 times smaller than bacteria
• Bacterial cells are about one tenth the size of eukaryotic cells and are typically 0.5–5.0 micrometres in length
• There are approximately five nonillion (.5×10^30) bacteria on Earth, forming much of the world's biomass.
Clicker question• If the average weight of a bacterium is a picogram (10^12 or 1 trillion per gram).• The average human is estimated to have about 50 trillion human cells, and it is
estimated that the number of bacteria in a human is ten times the number of human cells.
• How much do the bacteria in a typical human weigh?• A) < 10 grams• B) between 10 and 100 grams• C) between 100 grams and 1 kg• D) between 1 Kg and 10 Kg• E) > 10 Kg
How big is a googol?
Some small numbers• 17 trillion: national debt• 1 trillion: a partial bailout• 314 million: number of americans• 1 billion: 3 x (number of americans) (approx)• 1 trillion: 1000 x 1 billion• $ 54,134: your share of the national debt• Each month the national debt increases by the annual GDP of
New Mexico
Visualizing quantities• How many pennies would it take to fill the
empire state building?• Your share of the national debt
Clicker question• If one cubic foot of pennies is worth $491.52, your share of
the national debt, in pennies, would fill a cube closest to the following dimensions:
• A) 1x1x1 foot (one cubic foot)• B) 3x3x3 (27 cubic feet)• C) 5x5x5 feet (125 cubic feet)• D) 100x100x100 (1 million cubic feet)• E) 1000x1000x1000 (1 billion cubic feet)
big numbersSmall Numbers have names
How to make bigger numbers faster
• Googol: • Googolplex:
Power towers
Power towers and large numbers
Number and Prime Numbers• Natural numbers: 0,1,2,3,… allow us to count things.• Divisible: p is divisible by q if some whole number multiple of
q is equal to p.• Division allows us to divide the things counted into equal
groups.• Remainder: if p>q but p is not divisible by q then there is a
largest m such that mq<p and we write p=mq+r where 0<=r<q• p is prime if its only divisors are p and itself.
Some facts about prime numbers
• Proof: If Q is not prime then we can write Q=ab for whole numbers a, b where a>1 (and hence b<Q)
• Suppose that a is the smallest whole number, larger than one, that divides into Q. Then a is prime since, otherwise, we could write a=cd where c>1 (and hence d<a). But then d is a smaller number than a that divides into Q, which contradicts our choice of a.
Every whole number is either prime or is divisible by a smaller prime number.
There are infinitely many prime numbers• Proof by contradiction.• If there were only finitely many then we could list them all: p1,p2,…,pN
• Set Q=p1*p2*…*pN+1
• Claim: Q is not divisible by any of the numbers in the list. Otherwise, Q=Pm for some integer m and P in the list, say P=p1 (the same argument applies or the other pi’s) Then
• p1*(p2*…*pN)+1 =p1*m or p1*(m-p2*…*pN)=1
• But this is impossible because if the product of two whole numbers a and b is 1, i.e., a*b=1, then a=1 and b=1. But p1 is not equal to one.
• This contradiction proves that Q is not divisible by any prime number on the list so either Q itself is a prime number not on the list or it is divisible by a prime number not on the list.
Fundamental theorem of arithmetic: Every whole number can be written uniquely as a
product of prime powers.• We use the principal of mathematical
induction: if the statement is true for n=1 and if its being true for all numbers smaller than n implies that it is true for n, then it is true for all whole numbers.
• If n is itself prime then we are done (why?)• Otherwise n is composite, ie, n=ab where a,b are whole numbers smaller
than 1. The induction hypothesis is that a and b can be written uniquely as products of prime powers, that is,
• a=p1n1p2
n2….pknk and b=p1
m1p2m2…pk
mk
• Here p1, p2,….,pk are all primes smaller than n and the exponents could equal
zero.• Then n=ab=p1
n1+m1p2n2+m2….pk
nk+mk
• The exponents are unique since changing any of them would change the product.
Clicker Question• Which of the following correctly expresses
123456789 as a product of prime factors:• A) 123456789=2*3*3*3*3*769*991• B) 123456789=29*4257131• C) 123456789=3*3*3607*3803• D) 123456789=2*2*7*13*17*71*281
What this means:• There is a code (the prime numbers) for
generating any whole number via the code• Given the code, it is simple to check the code
(by multiplying)• Given the answer, it is not easy, necessarily, to
find the code.
Large prime numbers• Euclid: there are infinitely many prime
numbers• Proof: given a list of prime numbers, multiply
all of them together and add one.• Either the new number is prime or there is a
smaller prime not in the list.
Some things that are not known about prime numbers
• Goldbach’s conjecture: every even number bigger than two is the sum of two prime numbers (e.g., 8=3+5; 112=53+59; etc)
• Twin prime conjecture: there are infinitely many primes p such that p+2 is also a prime. In this case, p and p+2 are called twin primes.
• E.g., (3,5), (5,7), (11,13), (29,31) etc• Gap prime conjecture: there is a number N(<70 million) such that there are infinitely many prime pairs of
the form (p, p+N)
How big is the largest known prime number?
• 257,885,161-1 has 17,425,170 digits.• A typical 8x10 page of text contains a
maximum of about 3500 characters (digits)• Printing out all of the digits would take about
5000 pages. That’s a full carton of standard copier paper. That’s about 0.6 trees.
Security codes• Later we might discuss RSA encryption, which
is based on prime number pairs, M=E*D where E,D are prime numbers. Standard 2048 bit encryption uses numbers M that have about 617 digits. In principle we have to check divisibility by prime numbers up to about 300 digits.
Euclid’s algorithms: GCD• The greatest common divisor of M and N is the largest whole
number that divides evenly into both M and N• GCD (6 , 15 ) = 3• If GCD (M, N) = 1 then M and N are called relatively prime.• Euclid’s algorithm is a method to find GCD (M,N)
Euclid’s algorithm• M and N whole numbers.• Suppose M<N. If N is divisible by M then GCD(M,N) = M• Otherwise, subtract from N the biggest multiple of M that is
smaller than N. Call the remainder R.• Claim: GCD(M,N) = GCD (M,R).• Repeat until R divides into previous.
Example: GCD (105, 77) • 49 does not divide 105.• Subtract 1*77 from 105. Get R=28• 28 does not divide into 77. Subtract 2*28 from 77.
Get R=77-56=21• Subtract 21 from 28. Get 7.• 7 divides into 21. Done. • GCD (105, 77) = 7.
Clicker question: find GCD (1234,121)
• A) 1• B) 11• C) 21• D) 121