The Golden Ratio (@winstonfoo8)

The golden Ratio was a really, really, interesting and surprising topic. To find out that the ultimate ratio behind the rectangles we see every day was fantastic.

 

#exploremaths

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Beauty & Mathematics (by@iamjazzyh)

Sup,
(Yesterday’s) lesson was about how mathematics was beautiful and vice-versa, which to be honest did strike me as odd. We then did the math and after that I think I understood a little bit more about how mathematical concepts are all around us, whether we realise it or not. It also clarified the theory behind the Golden Ratio/Golden Spiral for me. I had heard of it before but never really understood why it was significant, until now. I learned that the value of ‘phi’ was present in every aspect of nature and also that it could be related to Fibonacci numbers.
🙂
#exploremaths

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The Golden Ratio (by @happynikitakk)

Today’s lesson was centred about the beauty of maths, mainly the ‘Golden Ratio,’ a single number 1.618…that simply appears everywhere. From the pyramids, to old architecture to even in the Fibonacci sequence, and thus in nature itself, the number remains omnipresent! The idea baffled and even slightly scared me. 

#exploremaths

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The Golden Ratio

Today’s lesson was centred about the beauty of maths, mainly the ‘Golden Ratio,’ a single number 1.618…that simply appears everywhere. From the pyramids, to old architecture to even in the Fibonacci sequence, and thus in nature itself, the number remains omnipresent! The idea baffled and even slightly scared me. 

#exploremaths

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or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient
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Exploring Maths (AnikSingh1999)

I was very surprised at how 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+10+11+12 can equal -1/12 but I guess I have a lot to learn over the remainder of the year. I don’t really have any topics in mind that I want to learn.

Today’s lesson was interesting because I had never heard of the Golden Ratio rule and how it can make a spiral from that.

Cheers

#exploremaths 

Golden Ratio (by @brendanmckee99)

Today I thought that the Golden Ratio was quite interesting. I had already known a little bit about it, but was interested to find out how it was in so many places, especially in old architecture. I also liked the algebraic reasoning behind it, and how it is linked to the Fibonacci sequence.

#exploremaths

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