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#Mathematician Reel by @l_.movies_hub - The Man Who Knew Infinity

(2015)

Genre: Drama / Biography

Country of Production: USA / United

Kingdom

Movie duration: 1 hour and 48 minutes

IMDb
2.8M
L_
@l_.movies_hub
The Man Who Knew Infinity (2015) Genre: Drama / Biography Country of Production: USA / United Kingdom Movie duration: 1 hour and 48 minutes IMDb rating: 7.2 / 10 The story bygaz: The film tells the true story of Indian mathematician genius Srinivasa Ramanujan, who grew up in extreme poverty in India and possesses an exceptional talent in numbers and equations. Ramanujan writes to British mathematics professor Godfrey Hardy, who discovers his genius and invites him to Cambridge. There, he faces severe difficulties related to cultural disparity, discrimination, and disease, in addition to the conflict between innate intuition and rigorous academic science. The film explores the complex relationship between Ramanujan and Hardy, built on respect and intellectual difference. An inspiring humanitarian work about genius, determination, and the price that man can pay for science. Viewing tip: An excellent choice for fans of ideological films and autobiographies, especially for those interested in the stories of geniuses who changed the world despite harsh
#Mathematician Reel by @intalogy - It's called an oloid - a shape built from two circles locked at 90 degrees, invented by mathematician Paul Schatz in 1929.

Instead of spinning, it ro
23.2M
IN
@intalogy
It’s called an oloid - a shape built from two circles locked at 90 degrees, invented by mathematician Paul Schatz in 1929. Instead of spinning, it rocks in a figure-eight motion that moves liquid in every direction at once. No dead zones. No foam. No wasted energy. A regular mixer needs 1,500+ rpm to do the same job. The oloid does it at 100. It can reduce energy consumption by up to 80% Oloid compared to conventional mixing. That’s why it shows up in breweries, biotech labs, wastewater plants - and it’s even efficient enough to run on solar power. Same weird shape. Way smarter result. #oloidstirrer #3Dmixer #oloidtechnology #industrialmixing #paulschatz
#Mathematician Reel by @therealnurtle - In 1949, Indian mathematician D. R. Kaprekar described a numerical process that revealed a fixed result for four digit numbers in base ten. That resul
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@therealnurtle
In 1949, Indian mathematician D. R. Kaprekar described a numerical process that revealed a fixed result for four digit numbers in base ten. That result is 6174, now known as Kaprekar’s Constant. The process works as follows. Take any four digit number with at least two different digits. Rearrange its digits to form the largest possible number and the smallest possible number, then subtract the smaller from the larger. Repeat the same steps with each new result. No matter which valid four digit number you start with, the sequence reaches 6174 in a finite number of steps. Once reached, the process becomes stable because rearranging 6174 gives 7641 and 1467, and their difference is 6174 again. This behavior is specific to four digit numbers in the base ten number system. Other digit lengths can have similar constants, but 6174 is unique to four digit decimal numbers and always acts as the final fixed point of the process. —————— #viral #math #science #news #Nurtle
#Mathematician Reel by @theuntriggered - I'm a whole mathematician pressing R1+R2 because 1+2 equals 3
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"Press R3"�Me at 8 years old: -
This meme captures pure childhood gaming panic on Play
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@theuntriggered
I’m a whole mathematician pressing R1+R2 because 1+2 equals 3 - “Press R3”�Me at 8 years old: - This meme captures pure childhood gaming panic on PlayStation. “Press R3” means push the right analog stick straight down like a button for actions like sprinting or camera reset. At age 8, kids had zero clue what R3 was. You’d stare at the controller in total confusion, mashing every button and stick while the game waited. The blank line shows that frozen, clueless reaction. It’s nostalgic gold for anyone who grew up with PS2, PS3, or later consoles. Instant frustration turned hilarious memory. - #viral #reels #memes
#Mathematician Reel by @brilliant_mind572 - Joan Elizabeth Lowther Clarke (1917-1996) was a British mathematician recruited to the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park in June 194
4.4M
BR
@brilliant_mind572
Joan Elizabeth Lowther Clarke (1917–1996) was a British mathematician recruited to the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park in June 1940 by her former Cambridge supervisor, Gordon Welchman, where she became one of the few women working directly on breaking the German Naval Enigma cipher in Hut 8. Initially placed with other women in routine clerical duties, her mathematical ability soon led to her involvement in Banburismus, a statistical cryptanalytic technique developed by Alan Turing and others to reduce the possible settings of the Enigma machine and accelerate decryption. Clarke became recognised for her skill in applying Banburismus and was described by colleagues as “one of the best Banburists” in the section, she was promoted to Deputy Head of Hut 8 in 1944 and remained its longest‑serving senior cryptanalyst. Although institutional norms prevented formal classification as a cryptanalyst, requiring her to be paid as a “linguist” despite knowing no foreign languages, her contributions were integral to decrypting U‑boat communications, which materially aided Allied naval operations, and she was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1946 for her wartime service. After the war she continued with the successor agency (GCHQ) and also pursued numismatic research. #trending #fyp #reels #motivation #life #brilliantmind
#Mathematician Reel by @l9tal.__.x - A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how a person can lose himself wit
7.1M
L9
@l9tal.__.x
A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how a person can lose himself within his own mind - and still find a way back through love, patience, and trust. Long after the equations fade, what remains are the moments where John Nash stands face to face with his own shadows, choosing to live despite them. The most haunting scenes are not loud or dramatic. They are the moments of doubt, the silence between reality and illusion, and the fragile determination to hold on to what feels real. Watching Nash struggle between what his mind creates and what his heart knows is real leaves a lingering ache, especially when he never lets go of the woman who believes in him even when he cannot believe in himself. The emotional weight of the film is gently carried by soft piano melodies and restrained background music. It doesn’t demand attention - it slowly pulls you in. By the time Alicia takes Nash’s hand, sound and image blen #🇯🇵
#Mathematician Reel by @1showclip - The 2001 film A Beautiful Mind is not merely a story about a genius mathematician; it is a profound exploration of how a person can rediscover themsel
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@1showclip
The 2001 film A Beautiful Mind is not merely a story about a genius mathematician; it is a profound exploration of how a person can rediscover themselves through love and trust, even amid deep inner turmoil. More than the dazzling scenes of complex calculations, it is the moments where John Nash struggles to overcome the shadows within his own mind that linger long after the film ends. The way he wavers between reality and illusion, yet never lets go of his feelings for his wife, creates a quiet ache that touches the heart. What truly completes the emotional depth of this film is its gentle piano melodies and calm background score. At first, the music seeps in almost unnoticed, but before you realize it, you find yourself immersed in Nash’s emotions. In the later scenes, especially when his wife reaches out and holds his hand, the harmony between music and visuals naturally overlaps, leaving the viewer with misty eyes. This is likely why so many people say, “Just thinking about that scene makes my heart feel heavy.” The reason this film swept so many awards goes beyond its popularity. It softly reminds us that everyone carries their own “invisible battles.” Watching it again after time has passed feels like sitting quietly on a late night, gently sorting through long-held thoughts, and finding an unexpected sense of comfort.
#Mathematician Reel by @sportsfact.io - 𝙁𝙊𝙇𝙇𝙊𝙒 𝙁𝙊𝙍 𝙈𝙊𝙍𝙀

A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how
2.3M
SP
@sportsfact.io
𝙁𝙊𝙇𝙇𝙊𝙒 𝙁𝙊𝙍 𝙈𝙊𝙍𝙀 A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how a person can lose himself within his own mind — and still find a way back through love, patience, and trust. Long after the equations fade, what remains are the moments where John Nash stands face to face with his own shadows, choosing to live despite them. The most haunting scenes are not loud or dramatic. They are the moments of doubt, the silence between reality and illusion, and the fragile determination to hold on to what feels real. Watching Nash struggle between what his mind creates and what his heart knows is real leaves a lingering ache, especially when he never lets go of the woman who believes in him even when he cannot believe in himself. The emotional weight of the film is gently carried by soft piano melodies and restrained background music. It doesn’t demand attention — it slowly pulls you in. By the time Alicia takes Nash’s hand, sound and image blend so naturally that tears arrive without warning. Many people say that just remembering that scene makes their chest feel tight, and it’s hard to disagree. This film earned its awards not because it tried to impress, but because it quietly reminds us that everyone is fighting an invisible battle. Rewatching it years later feels like sitting alone at night, finally sorting through long-held thoughts, and finding a strange, comforting sense of peace. 🍋
#Mathematician Reel by @1showmeme - The 2001 film A Beautiful Mind is not merely a story about a genius mathematician; it is a profound exploration of how a person can rediscover themsel
1.9M
1S
@1showmeme
The 2001 film A Beautiful Mind is not merely a story about a genius mathematician; it is a profound exploration of how a person can rediscover themselves through love and trust, even amid deep inner turmoil. More than the dazzling scenes of complex calculations, it is the moments where John Nash struggles to overcome the shadows within his own mind that linger long after the film ends. The way he wavers between reality and illusion, yet never lets go of his feelings for his wife, creates a quiet ache that touches the heart. What truly completes the emotional depth of this film is its gentle piano melodies and calm background score. At first, the music seeps in almost unnoticed, but before you realize it, you find yourself immersed in Nash’s emotions. In the later scenes, especially when his wife reaches out and holds his hand, the harmony between music and visuals naturally overlaps, leaving the viewer with misty eyes. This is likely why so many people say, “Just thinking about that scene makes my heart feel heavy.” The reason this film swept so many awards goes beyond its popularity. It softly reminds us that everyone carries their own “invisible battles.” Watching it again after time has passed feels like sitting quietly on a late night, gently sorting through long-held thoughts, and finding an unexpected sense of comfort.
#Mathematician Reel by @mathvibes01 - In mathematics, the Lévy C curve is a self-similar fractal curve that was first described and whose differentiability properties were analysed by Erne
3.8M
MA
@mathvibes01
In mathematics, the Lévy C curve is a self-similar fractal curve that was first described and whose differentiability properties were analysed by Ernesto Cesàro in 1906 and Georg Faber in 1910, but now bears the name of French mathematician Paul Lévy, who was the first to describe its self-similarity properties as well as to provide a geometrical construction showing it as a representative curve in the same class as the Koch curve. It is a special case of a period-doubling curve, a de Rham curve. If using a Lindenmayer system then the construction of the C curve starts with a straight line. An isosceles triangle with angles of 45°, 90° and 45° is built using this line as its hypotenuse. The original line is then replaced by the other two sides of this triangle. At the second stage, the two new lines each form the base for another right-angled isosceles triangle, and are replaced by the other two sides of their respective triangle. So, after two stages, the curve takes the appearance of three sides of a rectangle with the same length as the original line, but only half as wide. At each subsequent stage, each straight line segment in the curve is replaced by the other two sides of a right-angled isosceles triangle built on it. After n stages the curve consists of 2ⁿ line segments, each of which is smaller than the original line by a factor of 2⁽ⁿ÷²⁾. This L-system can be described as follows: Variables: F Constants: + − Start: F Rules: F → +F−−F+ where "F" means "draw forward", "+" means "turn clockwise 45°", and "−" means "turn anticlockwise 45°". The fractal curve that is the limit of this "infinite" process is the Lévy C curve. It takes its name from its resemblance to a highly ornamented version of the letter "C". The curve resembles the finer details of the Pythagoras tree. The Hausdorff dimension of the C curve equals 2 (it contains open sets), whereas the boundary has dimension about 1.9340 Follow @mathvibes01 for more 🔥 #math #manim #python #mathematics
#Mathematician Reel by @quasar_questt - We think we understand scale.

We don't.

In 1950, mathematician Claude Shannon calculated the number of possible chess games. The estimate? Around 10
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@quasar_questt
We think we understand scale. We don’t. In 1950, mathematician Claude Shannon calculated the number of possible chess games. The estimate? Around 10^120. That’s a 1 followed by 120 zeros. For comparison, physicists estimate there are about 10^80 atoms in the observable universe. That means the number of possible chess games vastly exceeds the number of physical atoms that exist in reality. Not stars. Not galaxies. Atoms. Your intuition was never built to process numbers like this. We live comfortably inside small quantities. Hundreds. Thousands. Millions. But once numbers go exponential, your brain switches from understanding to approximation. And that gap between intuition and reality is where most misconceptions about the universe live. If this kind of scale fascinate you a little, you’re starting to think correctly. Follow for ideas that stretch perception, not just feed it. Shannon number 10^120 chess games atoms in the universe exponential growth explained human intuition limits combinatorics chess scale of the universe probability and physics
#Mathematician Reel by @l9tal.__.x - A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how a person can lose himself wit
1.4M
L9
@l9tal.__.x
A Beautiful Mind (2001) is not simply a story about a brilliant mathematician. It is a quiet, profound reflection on how a person can lose himself within his own mind - and still find a way back through love, patience, and trust. Long after the equations fade, what remains are the moments where John Nash stands face to face with his own shadows, choosing to live despite them. The most haunting scenes are not loud or dramatic. They are the moments of doubt, the silence between reality and illusion, and the fragile determination to hold on to what feels real. Watching Nash struggle between what his mind creates and what his heart knows is real leaves a lingering ache, especially when he never lets go of the woman who believes in him even when he cannot believe in himself. The emotional weight of the film is gently carried by soft piano melodies and restrained background music. It doesn’t demand attention - it slowly pulls you in. By the time Alicia takes Nash’s hand, sound and image blen

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