Fellow science YouTubers Henry Reich (minutephysics) and Derek Muller (veritasium) have just paid a visit to Nottingham.
It's not the wind... Henry pulled that face on purpose!!!!
Fellow science YouTubers Henry Reich (minutephysics) and Derek Muller (veritasium) have just paid a visit to Nottingham.
A while back Dr James Grime planted a sunflower in my backyard.
He was trying to raise awareness for the Turing's Sunflower project.
Well I'm pleased to report the potted sunflower is all grown up.
Slight problem though. We counted the seed spirals which supposedly should match with Fibonacci numbers.
Numberphile viewers are brilliant. One of them, Alan Stewart, has very promptly (*) emailed me about the latest video.
In the film, I attempt to throw a one-roll Yahtzee.
The odds of accomplishing such a feat (five matching dice showing any number) are 1 in 1,296.
I achieved the feat on the 627th roll. According to Alan's spreadsheet and graph (below), there was a 38% probability I would have reached my goal so early.
To reach a 95% chance of success, I'd have needed 3,881 rolls.
So 627 doesn't seem such an ordeal after all.
Do you know how to solve a Rubik's Cube (or know someone who can)?
Cute viewer pic this one!
This is River from Plainfield, Vermont, USA, and she's a fan of our Periodic Table of Videos.
She's modelling a molecule of methane.
We've posted two videos in the past week or so about the epic Tarantula Nebula (aka NGC 2070).
Professor Phil Moriarty and YouTuber Dave Brown (boyinaband) created a "math metal" song based on the Gold Ratio (Phi).
Here's the track (with music video!):
Below, in his own words, is Phil's explanation of what they did:
BY PROFESSOR PHIL MORIARTY
(note timings are mapped to start of the song, not the YouTube videos)
Here are all the gory details for the musicians amongst you...
Guitar tuning: Bb F Bb Eb G C
(This is traditional “drop D” tuning, i.e. D A D G B E, dropped two tones in order to approximate the math metal/Djent sound without a seven string guitar.)
We stick almost exclusively to riffs derived from the Bb harmonic minor scale (although the chorus is based around the natural Bb minor scale).
I used Guitar Rig to record the riffs (both clean and effected) which I then sent to Dave who used his studio wizardry and musical acumen to arrange and structure the song.
This involved quite a number of e-mail exchanges to hone the structure of the song during which Dave had to rein in my old school metal tendencies on more than one occasion.
Riff-by-riff
0:00: We kick off with a clean picked piece which looks like this:
Our "famous" royal portrait on a diamond is now on display at the Royal Society.
Why not go and see it (part of the society's famous summer exhibition)? It's open until Sunday at 6pm.
Those following my escapades via Facebook and Twitter may be aware of a recent visit from Michael Stevens, the man behind the YouTube channel Vsauce.
Here he is with none other than Neil (and Neil let Michael keep his lab coat - how is that for a souvenir).




