Who Wants to Be a Mathematician at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez
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Who Wants to Be a Mathematician made its first trip off the mainland when the game was held at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez on November 11. The game was held in conjunction with a lecture by Ken Ono, who is the Solle P. and Margaret Manasse Professor of Letters and Science in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Number Theory and Partitions: The legacy of Euler, Ramanujan and Dyson, and beyond by Ken Ono
Ono told the audience made up of high school students and teachers that his talk was "a collection of stories." He began by showing pictures of Leonhard Euler, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Albert Einstein, George Andrews, and Freeman Dyson. For each picture he asked how many in the audience recognized the person. Everyone recognized Einstein, but not as many recognized the other people. Ono identified each man, described some of his work, and subsequently included each person in the stories he told.
After showing the pictures, he gave an introduction to partitions (writing a given positive integer as a sum of positive integers) by showing the partitions of 4 (1+1+1+1, 1+1+2, 1+3, 2+2, and 4) and other small numbers, and asked the audience to guess the number of partitions of other numbers. People soon saw that it is difficult to count the number of partitions even for a relatively small number such as 16, which has 231 partitions, and that the number of partitions grows very quickly (as the numbers being partitioned grow). Given this difficulty, one might search for a formula for the number of partitions or for properties of partitions. Ono described progress in these areas, especially regarding congruences mod n for certain positive integers n. He also showed how Euler's generating functions relate to partitions.
In the early 1900s, Ramanujan proved three congruences about partitions involving mod 5, 7, and 11 (one is that for every positive integer n, 5 divides the number of partitions of 5n + 4). In 1944, Dyson conjectured that there was a "statistic" which he called the crank that implied Ramanujan's congruences. Ten years later, Atkin and Peter Swinnerton-Dyer proved the conjecture. At the time of the conjecture, Dyson did not know what the crank was or if it existed. He concluded his paper with, "May it [the crank] be preserved from the ignominious fate of the planet Vulcan." Ono pointed out that this was not the Star Trek Vulcan, but instead was a planet conjectured to exist inside the orbit of Mercury. Vulcan's existence was postulated in order to explain the discrepancies between the observed orbit of Mercury and predictions based on Newton's laws. Later these discrepancies were explained by Einstein's general theory of relativity. In 1988, Andrews and Frank Garvan saved the crank from the fate of Vulcan and found the crank function.
For a long time it was thought that Ramanujan's three congruences were the only such congruences, and in fact this belief led to the use of partitions in cryptography, but such is not the case: A. Oliver Atkin found another congruence in 1968 and in 2000 Ono himself proved that there are infinitely many such congruences. Ono concluded his talk by noting that earlier this year, Karl Mahlburg, one of his graduate students, proved that all of the congruences can be explained by the crank function. It was one more captivating story about partitions, an idea which is easy to state, but which is hard to calculate.
There was a break following the talk, with food and drinks provided by the Department of Mathematics. Ono talked with the students and teachers, and signed a few autographs.
Uroyoán R. Walker-Ramos of the University's Department of Mathematics provided translation (in Spanish) during the talk and the game, which allowed everyone to enjoy both.
Who Wants to Be a Mathematician
Before the games, Walker-Ramos and AMS Public Awareness Officer (and game emcee) Mike Breen awarded game t-shirts and AMS caps to audience members who answered math questions correctly.
Then, eight contestants listed with their schools and pictured below with Walker-Ramos and Mike, played two games of Who Wants to Be a Mathematician.
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Angel F. Adames Corraliza, Patria Latorre Ramirez
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Jennifer Aponte Martinez, Pablo Colón Berdecia
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Luis F. Carrazana, Colegio Ponceño
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Taíra M. Class Cruz, Superior Francisco Morales
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Joycemel Lorenzo, Jose de Diego
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Vanessa de L. Peréz Bosques, Catalina Morales de Flores
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Roxanne Rodriguez, Colegio Ponceño
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Edwin J. Suárez Vazquez, Lola Rodriguez de Tio
The winners in the two games were Luis and Edwin, who thus earned the right to answer the bonus question, worth $1500.
Unfortunately neither winner got the question correct, but all contestants received prizes. Each contestant's prize is listed below.
Maple 9.5 from Maplesoft: Luis F. Carrazana and Edwin J. Suárez Vazquez
TI-89 Titanium graphing calculator from Texas Instruments: Roxanne Rodriguez and Taíra M. Class Cruz
Calculus by Anton, Bivens and Davis from John Wiley and Sons: Angel F. Adames Corraliza and Joycemel Lorenzo
What's Happening in the Mathematical Sciences by Barry Cipra from the AMS: Jennifer Aponte Martinez and Vanessa de L. Pérez Bosques
The AMS thanks game sponsors Maplesoft, Texas Instruments, and John Wiley and Sons for their continued support of the game; the Department of Mathematics of the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez for hosting the event; and the teachers who made the effort to bring their students to the lecture and game on a holiday. The event was partially supported by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Mathematics of the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez .
Photographs by: Who Wants to Be a Mathematician judge and co-creator Bill Butterworth of the DePaul University Department of Mathematical Sciences, and Sandy Frost and Mike Breen of the AMS.