Math in the Simpsons: Homer's theorem
After putting on some glasses he found in a toilet Homer feels very smart and declares: "The sum of the square root of any two sides of an iscosceles triangle is equal to the square root of the remaining side." Well, sounds like Pythagoras theorem but it's not. The Mathologer sets out to track down this mystery theorem to its lair and dissects the hell out of it.
Enjoy :)
Видео Math in the Simpsons: Homer's theorem канала Mathologer
Enjoy :)
Видео Math in the Simpsons: Homer's theorem канала Mathologer
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Did Homer Simpson Discover the Higgs Boson 14 Years Ago? - IGN NewsPhi and the TRIBONACCI monsterEuler's and Fermat's last theorems, the Simpsons and CDC6600Thales's TheoremMath in the Simpsons: Apu's paradoxThe Futurama TheoremEpicycles, complex Fourier series and Homer Simpson's orbitThe Epic Simpsons Maths Joke (That Broke The Internet)2000 years unsolved: Why is doubling cubes and squaring circles impossible?Visualising Pythagoras: ultimate proofs and crazy contortionsThe hardest "What comes next?" (Euler's pentagonal formula)Ramanujan's infinite root and its crazy cousinsSecrets of the NOTHING GRINDERHomer Simpson vs Pierre de Fermat - NumberphileHow To Solve Insanely HARD Viral Math ProblemTimes Tables, Mandelbrot and the Heart of MathematicsWhy was this visual proof missed for 400 years? (Fermat's two square theorem)e to the pi i for dummies700 years of secrets of the Sum of Sums (paradoxical harmonic series)