Ron Knott's web pages on Mathematics:
- Fibonacci Numbers
a huge award-winning collection of information on Fibonacci numbers (0,1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,...)
and the Golden section ( 0.61803... and 1.61803...) which gets more than 1500
visits per day to the index (first) page alone!
- Egyptian Fractions explains how the
Egyptians and Babylonians of 3000 BC represented fractions and how they used them.
In some ways, their method is better than the decimal system! There are now some online calculators on this page to take some
of the work out of generating these fractions.
- An Introduction to Continued Fractions
links their use in explaining the patterns on seedheads and flowers and their usefulness in mathematics too.
- There is an online Continued Fraction Calculator
so you can experiment for yourself. No download is needed -- it is all accomplished on the web page!
- An accurate
Fractions Calculator to convert ordinary fractions to and from decimal fractions
to any number of decimal places accuracy.
The web page does not need an extra software, just a Script-enabled browser.
- Pythagorean Triangles - those integer-sided, right-angled triangles
such as the triangle with sides of 3, 4 and 5. Includes a formula for generating them all and calculator which
shows you how. These triangles were extensively studied by the Babylonians of
5000 years ago and some of the oldest mathematical writings (clay tablets) contain tables of such triangles.
The page includes several online interactive Calculators so you can experiment for yourself.
- Runsums
are sums of consecutive numbers, e.g. 4+5 is a runsum for 9, as is 2+3+4.
An on-line calculator computes all the runsums for a given number and finds numbers
with a specific number of runsums (e.g. under "2" would be 9 because 9 has just 2 runsums
shown above). Runsums are the difference between two Triangle Numbers, and this
is also explained on the web page.
- I have several pages on the CountOn
site which continues the work of Maths Year 2000, the UK government sponsored site for schools
which started in the International Year of Mathematics in 2000:
- A Perpetual Calendar
which can not only find the day of the week for a given day, months and year, but
also tell you the years when your birthday falls on a Saturday, or which months in
a year have a "Friday the 13th".
- Interactive Tests (one page per topic)
for Mathematics A and AS Level for MEI.
- "Where do you go to get a degree in Apologies?" at the University
of Sorry (Surrey) (groan). Here's a collection
of similar "courses".
Resources for Feast of Fractions talk February 2008
The talk will demonstrate :
Dr Ron Knott
Ph.D, M.Sc, B.Sc (Pure Maths), C.Math, FIMA, C.Eng, MBCS, CITP
Visiting Fellow, Department of Mathematics,
School of Electronics and Physical Sciences,
University of Surrey,
Email:
Phone: 01204 469237, international: +44 1204 469237
I now live in Bolton, near Manchester in northern England.
I was a lecturer in the Departments of Mathematics and Computing Science
for 19 years
until September 1998.
I now give talks to students at schools and universities
as well as to general audiences
on Mathematics, especially the Fibonacci Numbers.
I also make interactive online internet resources
for mathematics education web sites.
Apart from talks to schools and Teachers' Conferences, recent talks include:
- BBC Radio 4 Melvyn Bragg's
In Our Time
November 29, 2007 when we discussed "The Fibonacci Numbers".
Click on the link to
Listen Again or to download the 45 minute programme as a podcast.
- The Eden Project: July 2007
- Cambridge Science Festival, March 2007
- Coventry Cathedral's "Da Vinci Code" evening: May 2006
- BBC Radio 4 "Numbers" series: "Phi", "I" 2002
- Orkney Science Festival: 1998, 2000
- BBC Radio Scotland: 1998
updated: 30 January 2008