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I just made one, but I've already handed it in.
That's it, I'll give you a **, you can see for yourself.
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1. The short story of the mathematician Gauss.
Gauss is a second-grader in elementary school, and one day his math teacher has already dealt with most of the matter, and although he is in class, he still wants to complete it, so he plans to give the students a math problem to practice, his problem is: 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+10=? , Because the addition has just been taught, so the teacher thinks that this problem, the student must have to calculate it for a long time, it is possible to calculate it, and you can use this time to deal with unfinished things, but in a blink of an eye, Gauss has stopped the pen, sitting there idlely, the teacher saw a very angry reprimand Gauss, but Gauss said that he had calculated the answer, that is, 55, the teacher listened to a jump, and asked Gauss how to calculate it, Gauss replied, I just found that the sum of 1 and 10 is The sum of 9 is also the sum of 8 and 7 and the sum of 6 is still 11, and 11 + 11 + 11 + 11 + 11 + 11 = 55, that's how I calculated.
When Gauss grew up, he became a great mathematician. When Gauss was young, he was able to turn difficult problems into simple, of course, qualification is a big factor, but he knows how to observe, seek rules, and simplify difficulties, which is worthy of our learning and imitation.
2. The short story of mathematician Chen Jingrun.
Mathematician Chen Jingrun, while thinking about a problem, walked and hit the trunk of a tree without raising his head and said, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry." "Keep thinking.
3. The short story of the mathematician Thales.
Thales (ancient Greek mathematician and astronomer) came to Egypt and people wanted to test his abilities and asked him if he could measure the height of the pyramids. Thales said yes, but on one condition - the pharaoh had to be present. The next day, the pharaoh arrived as promised, and many onlookers gathered around the pyramid.
When he came to the pyramid, the sun casting his shadow on the ground. Every few moments, he had the length of his shadow measured, and when the measurement matched his height, he immediately made a mark where the Great Pyramid was projected on the ground, and then measured the distance from the base of the pyramid to the top of the projection spire. In this way, he gave the exact height of the pyramid.
At Pharaoh's request, he explained how to push from "shadow length equals body length" to "tower shadow equals tower height". This is what is known today as the similarity triangle theorem.
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Hua Luogeng helped his father in business when he was a child, planning to make inventory and keep accounts. At that time, Hua Luogeng stood in front of the counter, and as soon as the customer left, he buried his head in reading a book and calculating math problems. Sometimes they are so obsessed that they forget to receive customers, and even take the results of the arithmetic as the payment for the goods payable by the customers, which makes the customers startled.
Whenever something happened to a customer who neglected him, his father was angry and anxious, saying that he was stunned by reading the "Book of Heaven" and wanted to forcibly burn the book. When the dispute occurred, Hua Luogeng always held on to the book.
The great mathematician of the Northern and Southern Dynasties, Zu Chongzhi, calculated pi to the seventh decimal place. It is proved that pi is located between and . More than a thousand years before the Europeans got the same result.
The Pythagoreans of ancient Greece believed that any number in the world could be expressed as an integer or a fraction, and made this one of their creeds. One day, one of the members of this school, Hippasus, suddenly discovered that the diagonal of a square with a side length of 1 was a strange number, and he studied it diligently, and finally proved that it could not be represented by integers or fractions. But this broke the tenets of the Pythagoreans, and Pythagoras ordered him not to spread the word. >>>More
In 1785, at the age of 8, Gauss was in the first grade in an elementary school in rural Germany. >>>More
In the 16th century, the German mathematician Rudolph spent his whole life calculating pi to 35 decimal places, which later generations called Rudolph's number, and after his death, others engraved this number on his tombstone. After his death, the Swiss mathematician Jacob Bernoulli, who studied the spiral (known as the thread of life), was engraved on his tombstone with a logarithmic spiral, and the inscription reads: "Although I have changed, I am the same." >>>More
1. The short story of Chen Jingrun in mathematics.
Mathematician Chen Jingrun, while thinking about a problem, walked and hit the trunk of a tree without raising his head and said, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry." "Keep thinking. >>>More