9781470447595-1470447592-Bicycle or Unicycle?: A Collection of Intriguing Mathematical Puzzles (Problem Books)

Bicycle or Unicycle?: A Collection of Intriguing Mathematical Puzzles (Problem Books)

ISBN-13: 9781470447595
ISBN-10: 1470447592
Author: Daniel J. Velleman, Stan Wagon
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: American Mathematical Society
Format: Paperback 286 pages
Category: Mathematics
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781470447595
ISBN-10: 1470447592
Author: Daniel J. Velleman, Stan Wagon
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: American Mathematical Society
Format: Paperback 286 pages
Category: Mathematics

Summary

Bicycle or Unicycle?: A Collection of Intriguing Mathematical Puzzles (Problem Books) (ISBN-13: 9781470447595 and ISBN-10: 1470447592), written by authors Daniel J. Velleman, Stan Wagon, was published by American Mathematical Society in 2020. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other Mathematics books. You can easily purchase or rent Bicycle or Unicycle?: A Collection of Intriguing Mathematical Puzzles (Problem Books) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Mathematics books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $2.05.

Description

Bicycle or Unicycle? is a collection of 105 mathematical puzzles whose defining characteristic is the surprise encountered in their solutions. Solvers will be surprised, even occasionally shocked, at those solutions. The problems unfold into levels of depth and generality very unusual in the types of problems seen in contests. In contrast to contest problems, these are problems meant to be savored; many solutions, all beautifully explained, lead to unanswered research questions. At the same time, the mathematics necessary to understand the problems and their solutions is all at the undergraduate level. The puzzles will, nonetheless, appeal to professionals as well as to students and, in fact, to anyone who finds delight in an unexpected discovery.

These problems were selected from the Macalester College Problem of the Week archive. The Macalester tradition of a weekly problem was started by Joseph Konhauser in 1968. In 1993 Stan Wagon assumed problem-generating duties. A previous book written by Wagon, Konhauser, and Dan Velleman, Which Way Did the Bicycle Go?, gathered problems from the first twenty-five years of the archive. The title problem in that collection was inspired by an error in logic made by Sherlock Holmes, who attempted to determine the direction of a bicycle from the tracks of its wheels. Here the title problem asks whether a bicycle track can always be distinguished from a unicycle track. You'll be surprised by the answer.

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