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The Fibonacci Series, a set of numbers that increases rapidly, began as a medieval math joke about how fast rabbits breed. But it’s became a source of insight into art, architecture, nature, and ...
On a chessboard, I don’t just see pieces. The knight moves like it’s in a maze, the bishop traces an aperiodic diagonal. It’s ...
A notebook featuring Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man. Dilara Irem. Like the artist, the scientist is a lover of nature.
Not chess, but canvases. Meet Akhil Anand, son of Viswanathan Anand, who’s redefining art by combining maths, mythology, and ...
In his debut solo show Morphogenesis, teen artist Akhil Anand proves that patterns don't just repeat; they reveal.
Straight away, the first speaker put up a slide about some guy named Fibonacci. He was a math whiz who had nothing better to do than add sequential numbers together like this: 0+1 is 1. 1+1 is 2 ...
At just 14, Akhil Anand is creating intricate artworks that merge math, mythology, and tradition. From painting to books, he is making his own legacy.
Hoggatt sees Fibonacci everywhere. “The piano octave,” he notes with satisfaction, “has eight white keys—five black keys and 13 keys altogether,” all Fibonacci numbers.
The idea makes perfect sense to TJ math club sponsor Jennifer Allard, whose students love being recognized for their hard work as much as athletes do. "This is what they're good at," she said.