Line 4: Line 4:
 
''Author: Eli Lechien''
 
''Author: Eli Lechien''
  
<center>
+
</center>
  
 
In mathematics, sometimes a problem that appears difficult can be solved in an incredibly simple manner when looked at from the right perspective. The sphere packing problem is the absolute opposite of this: it is easy to understand, but painfully difficult to prove. After centuries, mathematicians finally crumbled and formed a proof by exhaustion, proving Kepler’s conjecture. Though there is no satisfying proof; this story of pirates, copper coins, silver bars, and gold codes is not a dry one. After gaining this knowledge, one cannot help but do a double take next time he or she observes a face-centered cubic stack of cantaloupes at the store.  
 
In mathematics, sometimes a problem that appears difficult can be solved in an incredibly simple manner when looked at from the right perspective. The sphere packing problem is the absolute opposite of this: it is easy to understand, but painfully difficult to prove. After centuries, mathematicians finally crumbled and formed a proof by exhaustion, proving Kepler’s conjecture. Though there is no satisfying proof; this story of pirates, copper coins, silver bars, and gold codes is not a dry one. After gaining this knowledge, one cannot help but do a double take next time he or she observes a face-centered cubic stack of cantaloupes at the store.  

Revision as of 03:04, 6 December 2020

Conclusion

Author: Eli Lechien

In mathematics, sometimes a problem that appears difficult can be solved in an incredibly simple manner when looked at from the right perspective. The sphere packing problem is the absolute opposite of this: it is easy to understand, but painfully difficult to prove. After centuries, mathematicians finally crumbled and formed a proof by exhaustion, proving Kepler’s conjecture. Though there is no satisfying proof; this story of pirates, copper coins, silver bars, and gold codes is not a dry one. After gaining this knowledge, one cannot help but do a double take next time he or she observes a face-centered cubic stack of cantaloupes at the store.


<-Applications of Higher Dimensional Packing

Works Cited->


Sphere Packing Home

Alumni Liaison

Questions/answers with a recent ECE grad

Ryne Rayburn