Dope: New Orleans Teens Make Historical Mathematical Discovery Unproven In 2,000 Years!

1 year ago
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#b1 #blackexcellence
Two New Orleans high school seniors who say they have proven Pythagoras's theorem by using trigonometry, which academics for two millennia have thought to be impossible, are being encouraged by a prominent US mathematical research organization to submit their work to a peer-reviewed journal. Calcea Johnson and Ne'Kiya Jackson, who are students of St Mary's Academy, recently gave a presentation of their findings at the American Mathematical Society south-eastern chapter's semi-annual meeting in Georgia. They were reportedly the only two high schoolers to give presentations at the meeting attended by math researchers from institutions including the universities of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana State, Ohio State, Oklahoma and Texas Tech. And they spoke about how they had discovered a new proof for the Pythagorean theorem. The 2,000-year-old theorem established that the sum of the squares of a right triangle's two shorter sides equals the square of the hypotenuse, the third, longest side opposite the shape's right angle. Legions of schoolchildren have learned the notation summarizing the theorem in their geometry classes: a2+b2=c2

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