Easy way to get 15 free YouTube views, likes and subscribers
Get Free YouTube Subscribers, Views and Likes

Secrets of the lost number walls

Follow
Mathologer

This video is about number walls a very beautiful corner of mathematics that hardly anybody seems to be aware of. Time for a thorough Mathologerization :) Overall a very natural followon to the very popular video on difference tables from a couple of months ago ("Why don't they teach Newton's calculus of 'What comes next?'")

00:00 Intro
01:02 Chapter 1: What's in a wall
03:35 Chapter 2: Number wall oracle
14:31 Chapter 3: Walls have windows
16:34 Animations of Pagoda sequence
18:13 Chapter 4: Zero problems
25:31 Chapter 5: Determinants
32:49 Animation sequence with music
35:22 Thank you :)

References for number walls
The main reference for number walls is Fred Lunnon's article "The numberwall algorithm: an LFSR cookbook", Journal of Integer Sequences 4 (2001), no. 1, 01.1.1.
https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/journals/JIS/...

Also check out Fred's article "The Pagoda sequence: a ramble through linear complexity, number walls, D0L sequences, finite state automata, and aperiodic tilings", Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 1 (2009), 130–148. https://arxiv.org/abs/0906.3286.'>https://arxiv.org/abs/0906.3286. Among many other things this one features lots of pretty pictures :)

Conway and Guy's famous "The book of numbers" has a chapter dedicated to number walls. This is where I first learned about number walls. Sadly, Figure 3.24 on page 88 which describes the horse shoe rule is full of typos. Careful:
1. (formulae on right) Negate signs attached to w_l/w and e_l/e ;
2. (diagram on left) Leftward arrow missing from edge marked w_2 ;
3. The last row of arrows bears labels " s_3 " ... " s_2 " ... " s_1 " , which should instead read " s_1 " ... " s_2 " ... " s_3 " .

More articles/books to check out if you are really keen:
https://tinyurl.com/bdhyzscw
https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/82737...
Jacek Gilewicz, Approximants de Padé, Springer Lecture Notes in Mathematics 667 (1978).

The Wiki page on linear recurrence with constant coefficients is a good resource for finding out about how the characteristic polynomial of a sequence translates into a "function rule"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_...

Coding challenge
Create an online implementation of the number wall algorithm using determinants or, ideally, using the cross and horseshoe rules and do a couple of fun things with your program. Here are some possible ideas you could play with: 1. generate pictures of even number (or, more generally, mod p) windows of random integer sequences or of sequences grabbed from here https://oeis.org/ . 2. Explore the Pagoda sequence number wall, again mod various prime numbers. Here is the entry for this sequence in the online Encyclopaedia of integer sequences https://tinyurl.com/yc45cfvf 3. Be inspired by the examples in this article https://arxiv.org/abs/0906.3286 Send me a link to your app before the next Mathologer video comes out and I'll enter you in the draw for a copy of Marty and my book Putting two and two together :)

Research challenge
Prove the Pagoda sequence wall conjecture or find a counterexample.

Bug report
In the video I say that figuring out the factor rule is easy. This is only true for windows of 0s of even dimensions. Showing that the factor rule has a 1 on the right side for windows of odd dimensions is actually somewhat tricky. Details in the first article by Fred Lunnon listed above.

Today's music: Asturias by Isaac Albeniz performed by Guitar Classics and Taiyo (Sun) by Yuhi (Evening Sun)
Today's tshirt: Yes, I am always right. If you are interested in getting one just google "Yes, I am always right math tshirt" and pick the version you like best.

Enjoy!

Burkard

posted by energicentroz3