Showing posts with label real life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label real life. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 June 2016

It's been a while, babies and blue whales

Year 7 has been very busy in term two doing things like school camps and NAPLAN. 
Now we are back with our full weeks of math and looking at patterns in the real world. 

Today we looked at the growth rate of babies in their first 13 weeks. 

The WHO provides the data - we used every two weeks to develop models for predicting - interpolating and extrapolating. This way we could check our maths with the real data! 

We used tables, graphs and developing algebraic rules to make predictions and compared their results.  Alex pointed out how ridiculous it would be to keep using our models into teenage years to illustrate how extrapolation can be unreliable.  Here are some notes from today and Alex's example:

How reliable are our models?
Reasonably reliable for interpolating. 
Not as reliable for extrapolating. Remember Alex calculated the weight of a 13 year old at the same growth rate as babies in their first 13 weeks. 

13 years = 13 x 52 weeks

13 years = 676 weeks


Our formula/equation/rule

Let  t = time weeks   and   k = weight in kg
k = 0.25 x t + 3.3
for 13 years old
k = 0.25 x 676 + 3.3

k = 172.3 kg 


That's not average in any country for a 13 year old boy!
The CDC, in the USA,  says the average weight for a male at 13 years old is 51.68229 kg  That's more than 100 kg lighter than our formula says. 
Can you find the average weight of a 13 year old in another country?


BABY BLUE WHALES

We talked about including units on our work to show kilograms otherwise our baby data could be in tonnes or even milligrams. A 3 tonne baby! Crazy!
... or not....? I did some searching....

For interest: Close to 3 tonnes are baby blue whales and their average difference is about 91 kg a day!!
Their formula would be k = 91 x d + 3000 and reliable for 365 days! 
where k = weight in kilograms and d = time in days. 3000 is the initial value (or 2700 - see below). 
After about a year inside its mother's womb, a baby blue whale emerges weighing up to 3 tons (2.7 metric tons) and stretching to 25 feet (8 meters). It gorges on nothing but mother's milk and gains about 200 pounds(91 kilograms) every day for its first year.

Blue Whales, Blue Whale Pictures, Blue Whale Facts - National ...

animals.nationalgeographic.com.au/animals/mammals/blue-whale/


Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Cool Maths Facts

Check out these slides of interesting maths facts.
I think the Monster Prime might be out of date now...

SLIDES FOUND HERE


 I like this site because they cite their source on each page. That's principled!

Wednesday, 2 March 2016

The BBC and Your Life So Far..

A while ago for another class I posted a cool created by the BBC.

http://thisismathsland.blogspot.com.au/2014/10/your-life-on-earth-cool-interactive.html

Input some data about yourself and then see what has happened since you were born...

There are some very big numbers for you to enjoy.


Sunday, 15 February 2015

Noodles, hair, atoms, exponential growth and decay and fractions.

This cool Youtube video has mathematics relevant for grade six and grade 11 courses right now.

For grade six - they can compare it with the doubling we did when we discussed ebola. They can also look at half of a half - multiplying a fraction by a fraction or as we say in mathsland the product of two fractions.

Grade 11 - this is exponential growth and decay simultaneously depending on how you view your noodles.


Friday, 21 November 2014

Sound Waves Circular Motion Water Coolness from 9gag

24-Hz sound wave collides with water

Click this link to the 9gag video - very cool


Click the link and watch what sound waves do to water

From the people at 9gag and thanks to Annalis in G09 for sharing it with me.

what is the white rectangle doing there? I don't know - I'll fix that this weekend (:

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Landing a Rocket on a Comet. Happening in the next 12 hours...

Landing on the moon - done
Landing a robot on Mars - done

Landing on a comet is a little trickier. Why? What do you think?

Why are we trying to do it?

Find out here

Follow it live from the people at NASA right HERE

Thursday, 30 October 2014

FINALLY! FLYING CARS

They have been talking about these forever. Many other things have come to be that were only crazy future ideas when I was a kid like...

THIS CRAZY DREAM CAME TRUE
Imagine if you could see the person you were calling on the phone and have a face to face conversation no matter where you were in the world. Hello Skype and some similar type face to face communication technology.

WE ARE STILL WAITING FOR:
We are still waiting for time travel (Alina make it happen!) but I heard the other day that the conjecture is travel into the past is impossible but other dimensions... why not?

Teleportation is being worked on by the Entanglement Generation, I kid you not.

RECENT HAPPENING
What has happened as far as dreams beginning to come true and THE FUTURE IS NOW type of stuff?

THE FLYING CAR - YAY and, quite frankly, about time.

Read about it here in The Guardian and WATCH THE VIDEO TOO


AeroMobil flying car prototype 3 is ready 8
"AeroMobil flying car prototype 3 is ready 8 | wordlessTech." 2014. 30 Oct. 2014 <http://wordlesstech.com/2014/10/10/aeromobil-flying-car/aeromobil-flying-car-prototype-3-is-ready-8/>

Friday, 17 October 2014

Your Life on Earth - cool interactive from the BBC

Your life on earth


Enter your details and this cool interactive will show you some of the things that have happened in your life time.

Enjoy!

BBC Earth Story Right Here

and while I am here this is pretty cool too:
World Population and Me

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

From The Good People at the Guardian Data Blog

Data data data - it's the information age your data is being harvested right now. Somewhere someone is using technology to record that you are reading this blog post. If they can they will also record any metadata they can too. 

You work with data too and it's important to know what all those terms mean - download speed, bits, bytes, Mbps and MBps. 

Have you downloaded or uploaded in different countries? Check out this cool visualisation of various speeds and quality of the internet - you can change the countries...

Have fun!

Cat photo by Flickr user wenlian chen












source:  "Download deathmatch: compare internet speed worldwide ..." 2013. 14 Oct. 2014 <http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/interactive/2013/dec/15/compare-internet-speed-worldwide>



Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Rays of Light and The Lunar Eclipse TODAY

Wednesday Evening's Rare 'Impossible' Lunar Eclipse

Check out the Blood Moon this evening. Hopefully the clouds won't cover it. 


Here is a clip from NASA

Watch in more detail here from NASA. 

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Nobel Prize goes to THE HEXAGON (and some persistent scientists)


"Neuroscience: Brains of Norway : Nature News & Comment." 7 Oct. 2014 <http://www.nature.com/news/neuroscience-brains-of-norway-1.16079>

Edvard and May-Britt Moser have been working together for 30 years. For 28 of those years they have also been married. 

These two scientists embody the learner profiles and show us how persistence, resilience and problem solving can lead to success. Not only that but mistakes along the way helped them to unravel the mystery of how our brains map out our environments. People are now calling it the GPS of our brains.

They have won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, with neuroscientist John O’Keefe at University College London (their former supervisor).

There is no Nobel Prize for Maths as we have discussed in class, but the mathematics is everywhere. Here in our brains wonderful hexagons form the way we sense location.

Please read more about it in the Scientific American and in Nature Magazine. Very exciting brain research! 

Monday, 29 September 2014

Exciting Space News - Women of India (and some men)

Check out this article about "Nandini Harinath, 44, a physicist and a mother of two, was the deputy operations director of the Mars mission - in other words, she was the person "operating" the spacecraft between Earth and Mars."

Article Here

Image and text from the BBC
original link from Amy Poehler's Smart Girls on Facebook. 
Indian staff from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) celebrate after the Mars Orbiter Spacecraft (MoM) successfully entered the Mars orbit

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Perseids Meteor Shower Peak soon - pretty skies

12-13 - Perseids Meteor Shower Peak - These meteors are leftovers from Swift-Tuttle comet and are a favorite among many skywatchers.
We missed the big show but the Super Moon would have made it tricky to see anyway. 

The shower can be visible from July 17th through August 24th, and will peak overnight on August 12th at 60 sightings per hour. Unfortunately, the light from the moon will wash out many of the meteors, though the brightest should still be visible.

You still have a chance to see this. Look up and enjoy.

You can also watch it online using slooh.com 
Check out membership to control their satellites to look into the universe. Cool!
http://live.slooh.com/stadium/live/special-highlight-the-perseids-sensation

Also NASA has recorded some of it (of course):
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/51306509

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Welcome Back and BIG NEWS

Stanford professor Maryam Mirzakhani became the first woman to win the prestigious Fields Medal for mathematics.

The Fields Prize has been awarded to a woman for the first time.


"Iranian-born mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani on Wednesday became the first woman to be awarded the Fields Medal, mathematics' equivalent to the Nobel Prize." Please read more in the CBC online here. 

You can also read more in The Guardian - a nice interview piece and The Stanford University press release, where Maryam Mirzakhani is a Professor of Mathematics


Thanks to Ajarn Lana for sharing this with the Mathematics department.


We are all working with Stanford University this year to develop our Mathematics and a growth mindset and you can puzzle over the famous puzzle that ignited her mathematical curiosity.


Add all of the numbers from 1 to 100 with a system that isn't 1+2+3+4 <-- there is a shortcut (:

Sunday, 8 June 2014

The Weather and its Patterns can be COOL

Below is an animated gif of winds around the Earth.
Check out the key below for deeper understanding of what you are looking at.

Source: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/data-access/model-data/model-datasets/reanalysis



A 3-D animated image of Reanalysis-2 data for the first ten days of July 1979, in six-hourly intervals. This animation shows a constant 100mph wind speed surface in red. (Note the stronger, more widespread, polar jet stream in the southern hemisphere--this is July, during the southern winter.) A cyan-colored, constant temperature sheet of zero degrees Celsius ripples across the globe, showing the freezing level. Near-surface wind flow is denoted by white flowlines. This image was generated with plots from Unidata's Integrated Data Viewer (IDV) combined with ImageMagick.


Mean Sea Surface Temperatures


A plot of global, monthly mean wind speeds and directions for September 1990. These data are from the Blended Sea Winds dataset, available through NOMADS. This image was produced with NASA’s Panoply visualization tool.

Here is a cool gif relating to what we are investigating in science and mathematics in MYP2
source: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/High_School_Earth_Science/Climate_and_Its_Causes











Sunday, 1 June 2014

Solar Power, Hexagons and a Moose

There has been a video of a moose lighting up a road as it crosses doing the rounds of social media recently. Today I clicked on it  and I was very impressed.  Two plucky people have invented amazing technology - solar panels that can be used as roads, pathways, outdoor areas shaped like hexagons.

If you are in MYP2 or you're a bee you know that the hexagon is part of making this technology strong.

It has won awards - check it out at indiegogo.com and in the video of one of their fans below.
Why isn't their government getting behind something like this? Great question.

I got behind it.


Sunday, 20 April 2014

The Depth of the Problem of MH370

http://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/page/world/the-depth-of-the-problem/931/

Click on the link, this article has a wonderful infographic about just how difficult it is to try and find the black box (Australian invention) of MH370.


They say time is running out, but what about how long it took them to find the Titanic or the Air France aeroplane? They will keep on looking, but will they find this one?

Which governments do you think should continue to look for the wreckage of MH370 and why?

Units of Measurement:

feet and metres 
from google.com


PSI - pounds per square inch
Source - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pounds_per_square_inch


A figure showing pressure exerted by particle collisions inside a closed container. The collisions that exert the pressure are highlighted in red.














pings
http://science.howstuffworks.com/transport/flight/modern/black-box8.htm
How Stuff Works is a great site.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

We Are Happy - AS A TOKEN OF GRATITUDE TO PHARRELL WILLIAMS

This came across my social media world today:

"AS A TOKEN OF GRATITUDE TO PHARRELL WILLIAMS, WE ARE FROM L.A. - CLÉMENT DUROU & PIERRE DUPAQUIER, FOR THEIR WORLDWIDE CONTAGIOUS HAPPINESS..."



We Are Happy Map of Videos - a map is a graph - enjoy!

Here's the one we looked at

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Pixels and the Scale of our Solar System

Check out this very cool If the Moon were the Size of a Pixel site, by Josh Worth.

It is very good at communicating the scale of the sun and the distance between planets.

CHECK IT OUT HERE