Math Galing 2.0: Bridging the Gaps in Basic Mathematics
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Math Galing 2.0: Bridging the Gaps in Basic Mathematics, Blogger, .
Gulatin mo teacher mo, I-perfect mo ang EXAM sa MATH 😅
Nagrereview na ba ang lahat?
Anong masasabi mo sa mga Math Lessons ngayong 1st Quarter?
DaMath is a math board game coined from the word dama, a Filipino checker game, and mathematics.
Find the product.
1. (-25)(-1) =
2. (-9)(-9) =
3. (6)(-8) =
Find the quotient.
4. 144 ÷ (-12) =
5. -99 ÷ (-9) =
6. (-64) ÷ 8 =
*
ctto - Calculus Guy
ANONG KWENTO MO KAPAG MATH SUBJECT NA ANG KLASE MO?😅
Find the difference.
1. -15 - (-15) =
2. 35 - (-75) =
3. -78 - 58 =
Find the sum.
1. - 45 + 45 =
2. -56 + (-44) =
3. 100 + (-32) =
Given: U = universal set
U= {3, 6, 9,12,15,18,21,24,27}
if A= { 3, 6, 9,12, 15}, what is A' ?
Geometry 🔥🔥
Ctto: Calli Math
Finally, mathematicians have discovered a polygon with a never-repeating pattern after decades of searching. This groundbreaking finding was previously thought to be impossible!
Researchers have finally found a shape that mathematicians call an "Einstein tile," which is a shape that never repeats. This 13-sided figure is the first polygon that can fill an infinite surface with a unique pattern. After decades of searching, experts have identified the elusive shape.
Repeating patterns have translational symmetry, meaning you can shift one part of the pattern and it will overlap perfectly with another part, without being rotated or reflected. The shape described in a new paper does not have translational symmetry—each section of its tiling looks different from every part that comes before it.
The “einstein” tile is made up of eight kites, or four-sided polygons with two pairs of adjacent, equal-length sides. Researchers call it “the hat” because of its resemblance to a fedora.
The shape is simpler than some experts expected it to be. Chaim Goodman-Strauss, a mathematician at the University of Arkansas and one of the authors of the paper, tells Science News that if he’d been asked to guess what the shape might look like before the finding, “I would’ve drawn some crazy, squiggly, nasty thing.”
Read the full article here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/at-long-last-mathematicians-have-found-a-shape-with-a-pattern-that-never-repeats-180981899/ #:~:text=The%2013-sided%20figure%20is,without%20being%20rotated%20or%20reflected.
Credits to the owner- Alnmrc Designs
Goodmorning!
0.2376 × 1000 =?