Showing posts with label Pascal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pascal. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Pascals Triangle

(Click on the comic if you can't see the full image.)
(C)Copyright 2015, C. Burke.

The 14C3 gifts of Christmas?

This occurred to me a while ago, but after Christmas, and I decided that it couldn't wait until December. (And I'd likely forget about it.)

While coming up with mathematical formulas and computer code for calculating this number, I overlooked a a very reliable reference tool: Pascal's Triangle.

It has more uses than simply expanding polynomials because of its many properties.

Some of these properties are as follows:

  • The "zeroth" element of each row is the number 1.
  • The first element of each row is the number of the row (keeping in mind that the top row is Row 0).
  • The second element of each row is are the consecutive triangle numbers, the sum of the consecutive numbers before it.
  • Which makes the third element of each row the sum of the consecutive triangle numbers.
  • And, finally, the position of each element in Pascal's Triangle corresponds to the number of Combinations designated by the notation nCr where n is the row and r is the element of that row.

    What this means is that for any given day in that song (The Twelve Days of Christmas):

  • nC1 refers to the day we're up to. On Day 7, 7C1 is 7.
  • n+1C2 refers to the total number of gifts given on the nth day. On Day 7, 8C2 is 28.
  • n+2C3 refers to the total number of gifts given altogether up to the nth day. On Day 7, 9C3 is 84.

    Applying this to the 12th day of the song:

  • 12C1 is 12.
  • 13C2 is 78.
  • 14C3 is 364.

    And I could've been finished a whole lot sooner. But I wouldn't have gotten a recursive comic out of that.

    One last thing: Did you ever try to make a poster of Pascal's Triangle? Have your students tried to do it for a math fair? The numbers start to get really big in the middle, really fast. (That's a post for another day.) But that's also why the poster in this comic is so large! Otherwise, it wouldn't be readable (and I had to modify the "364" so you could find it easily!).





  • Friday, April 18, 2014

    Good Friday

    (Click on the cartoon to see the full image.)
    (C)Copyright 2014, C. Burke.

    Or possibly labeled "Passion, Death, Resurrection"?

    Good Friday is part of the Paschal Triduum, which can also be spelled "Pascal", but I wanted to avoid confusion and basically hang a lampshade on it.




    Wednesday, December 25, 2013

    Christmas 2013

    (Click on the cartoon to see the full image.)

    (C)Copyright 2013, C. Burke.

    A last-minute comic on the night before Christmas with the candles 'blaising'...