@Math_files Avatar @Math_files Math Files

Math Files posts on X about math, in the, the first, if you the most. They currently have [-------] followers and [---] posts still getting attention that total [---------] engagements in the last [--] hours.

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Social Influence

Social category influence finance 2.71% countries 1.81% travel destinations 0.9% automotive brands 0.23%

Social topic influence math #11, in the 2.71%, the first #988, if you #1266, the world #1768, theory #194, princeton university #18, the most #3277, money 1.35%, world of #765

Top accounts mentioned or mentioned by @grok @aa_sim01 @jennythedev @sahilexec @heena_maths @rajyoga_ @michalyoudoing @yonghengzhiai @bethechange1980 @gayakwad72087 @goeun_6121 @timoneill007 @itswhoyouknow_ @hasan_arfi @opensourcehs @yogesh_bis9200 @uvfv9v @jhwitt15711 @thisiszoro @realolliexd

Top Social Posts

Top posts by engagements in the last [--] hours

"Solving the NavierStokes equations in 3D for all cases is one of the Millennium Prize Problems. Fluid mechanics is assumed to be hard because the NavierStokes equations. Theyre the core equations of fluid dynamics and literally govern everything from airplanes to pipelines. They describe how fluids movehow pressure velocity and viscosity interact over time. The NavierStokes equations are like Newtons second law F = ma but applied to fluid elements instead of a single particle when youre dealing with continuously moving fluid fields. At their core theyre partial differential equations that"
X Link 2026-02-13T18:29Z 108.7K followers, 102.7K engagements

"Bayes theorem is probably the single most important thing any rational person can learn. So many of our debates and disagreements that we shout about are because we dont understand Bayes theorem or how human rationality often works. Bayes theorem is named after the 18th-century Thomas Bayes and essentially its a formula that asks: when you are presented with all of the evidence for something how much should you believe it Bayes theorem teaches us that our beliefs are not fixed; they are probabilities. Our beliefs change as we weigh new evidence against our assumptions or our priors. In other"
X Link 2026-02-14T02:30Z 108.7K followers, 26.8M engagements

"-For People Who Hate Math https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022528730493505684 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022528730493505684"
X Link 2026-02-14T04:30Z 108.7K followers, 156.8K engagements

"Boy: I have a few questions for you. Girl: Alright Boy: What's [--] Girl: Zero. Boy: Okay. and what about [------] Girl: Still zero. Boy: That's the thing. Girl: What Boy: No matter how big the effort on one side if the other side stays at zero.the result will always be nothing"
X Link 2026-01-20T13:29Z 108.7K followers, 1.8M engagements

"Simple and compound interest https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016471232192053750 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016471232192053750"
X Link 2026-01-28T11:19Z 108.7K followers, 8.1M engagements

"In [----] the Swiss mathematician Jacob Bernoulli made an important discovery while thinking about money and interest. He was studying what happens when interest is added not just once a year but again and again in smaller and smaller steps. As he followed this idea further he came across a special number. That number was later called e. At first it appeared in problems about compound interest. But over time mathematicians realized that this number was far more powerful. It shows up whenever something grows or changes continuouslylike populations radioactive decay or even the way heat spreads."
X Link 2026-02-10T20:00Z 108.7K followers, 246.6K engagements

"George Plya tells a story about his former student John von Neumann: He is the only student of mine I was ever intimidated by. He was so quick. There was a seminar for advanced students in Zrich that I was teaching and von Neumann was in the class. I came to a certain theorem and said it was not proved and might be difficult. Von Neumann didnt say anything. But after five minutes he raised his hand. When I called on him he went to the board and proceeded to write down the proof. After that I was afraid of von Neumann. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022136143613964491"
X Link 2026-02-13T02:30Z 108.7K followers, 355.6K engagements

"1/89 = [----] + [-----] + [------] + [-------] + [--------] + [---------] + [----------] + [-----------] + [------------]. So the Fibonacci sequence is encoded in the number 1/89"
X Link 2026-02-13T13:30Z 108.7K followers, 29K engagements

"http://x.com/i/article/2022294271802707968 http://x.com/i/article/2022294271802707968"
X Link 2026-02-13T13:36Z 108.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Stokes theorem is one of favorite theorems in mathematics. The generalized Stokes theorem relates an integral over a d-dimensional object to an integral over its (d1)-dimensional boundary. What changes is what goes inside each integral. It all starts with the fundamental theorem of calculus. If you remember what it says it basically states that differentiation and integration are inverse operations. More concretely for our purposes it says that whenever you integrate a derivative that is the same as evaluating the original function at its endpoints. Whats interesting about the fundamental"
X Link 2026-02-13T22:30Z 108.7K followers, 19.4K engagements

"Imagine a mathematician so extraordinary hes been compared to Mozart. Terence Tao a living legend in the world of mathematics. Born in Australia Tao showed his prowess early winning a gold medal at just [--] in the International Mathematical Olympiad. But his real claim to fame lies in his contributions to analysis and number theory which have reshaped our understanding of mathematics. His work on the GreenTao theorem proving that there are arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions of prime numbers is a standout achievement. He has also worked on aspects of the NavierStokes existence and"
X Link 2026-02-14T06:29Z 108.7K followers, 36.5K engagements

"What do galaxies sunflowers butterfly wings hurricanes pine cones shells and the Mona Lisa all have in common The answer is the Fibonacci sequence. Its simple to understand: you start with [--] and [--] and each new number is the sum of the two before it. [--] + [--] = [--] [--] + [--] = [--] [--] + [--] = [--] [--] + [--] = [--] and so on. If you use these numbers to construct squares with corresponding side lengths you can draw a spiral through them. This is often called the golden spiral. For centuries artists have associated this spiral with harmonious and balanced proportions in art and design. Leonardo da Vinci is frequently"
X Link 2026-02-14T16:30Z 108.7K followers, 11.9K engagements

"A delight from Ramanujan"
X Link 2026-02-14T21:30Z 108.7K followers, 53.8K engagements

"Flight attendant: Do we have a doctor on board Me: I have a PhD in mathematics Flight attendant: one passenger is having a heart attack and one passenger is having an asthma attack Me: (nodding) that makes two"
X Link 2026-01-31T22:15Z 108.7K followers, 1.6M engagements

"(a + b) = a + 2ab + b (a - b) = a - 2ab + b (a + b)(a - b) = a - b (x + a)(x + b) = x + (a + b)x + ab (x - a)(x - b) = x - (a + b)x + ab (x + a)(x - a) = x - a (a + b + c) = a + b + c + 2ab + 2bc + 2ca (a + b) = a + 3ab + 3ab + b (a - b) = a - 3ab + 3ab - b a + b = (a + b)(a - ab + b) a - b = (a - b)(a + ab + b) (a + b + c) = a + b + c + 3(a + b)(b + c)(c + a) If a + b + c = [--] then a + b + c = 3abc a + b + c - 3abc = (a + b + c)(a + b + c - ab - bc - ca) https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2021057880523423804 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2021057880523423804"
X Link 2026-02-10T03:05Z 108.7K followers, 33.6K engagements

"Why the Beginning of a Sequence Doesnt Tell the Whole Story"
X Link 2026-02-15T01:30Z 108.7K followers, 16.9K engagements

"Galileo Galilei was born in [----]. He was very good at studies as a child. When the first telescope was invented in [----] Galileo quickly improved its design so that it could magnify [--] or even [--] times. Two years later Galileo used his improved telescope and discovered four massive moons of Jupiter: Io Ganymede Europa and Callisto. At the same time Galileo also observed that the Earth and Moon orbit the Sun. However at that time the Church controlled what people were allowed to know. According to them the Earth was the center of the universe located in the heavens. In [----] Galileo was"
X Link 2026-02-15T02:30Z 108.7K followers, 13K engagements

"Many failed to determine the value of a"
X Link 2025-07-18T10:27Z 108.4K followers, 3.7M engagements

"Simplify and evaluate"
X Link 2025-07-24T10:38Z 108.2K followers, 4.9M engagements

"The Smith Chart Born from math Raised by physics Mastered by engineers"
X Link 2025-10-18T11:48Z 108.3K followers, 207.5K engagements

"Chart 📉 📈 Square and Square root Cube and Cube root"
X Link 2025-10-20T07:18Z 108.3K followers, 45.8K engagements

"Greek Alphabet Table"
X Link 2025-10-26T00:16Z 108.3K followers, 78.1K engagements

"A system of thinking to help you solve any problem"
X Link 2025-11-06T14:31Z 108.4K followers, 311.8K engagements

"How many triangles"
X Link 2025-11-14T02:49Z 75.1K followers, 1.9M engagements

"1. Algebra is good for problem-solving. [--]. Geometry is good for visual thinking. [--]. Calculus is good for understanding change. [--]. Statistics is good for decision-making. [--]. Number theory is good for logical discipline. [--]. Linear algebra is good for modern science and engineering. [--]. Discrete math is good for computer science. [--]. Differential equations are good for modeling the real world. [--]. Optimization is good for smart planning. [--]. Graph theory is good for network thinking. [--]. Set theory is good for structured reasoning. [--]. Practice is good for mathematical fluency. [--]. Curiosity is"
X Link 2025-11-21T13:23Z 73K followers, 1M engagements

"God is a mathematician of a very high order and He used advanced mathematics in constructing the universe. -Paul Dirac ✍"
X Link 2025-12-07T12:35Z 75.8K followers, 12.7K engagements

"Together we are one"
X Link 2025-12-14T10:18Z 74K followers, 1.5M engagements

"Much of modern physics traces back to the minds in this famous [----] Solvay Conference photo. The scientists showed the theories found in every physics textbook. Remarkably [--] of the [--] were Nobel laureate"
X Link 2026-01-02T07:06Z 85.6K followers, 19.1K engagements

"Erwin Schrdinger was admired by students for his clear lectures and relaxed manner. He ignored academic dress codes and dressed informally even causing surprise at the [----] Solvay Conference by arriving in hiking clothes with a backpack. In conservative Berlin he still wore sweaters bow ties or short-sleeved shirts. Once a guard even mistook him for an imposter and blocked his entry until students confirmed he was their professor. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2007626068774326531 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2007626068774326531"
X Link 2026-01-04T01:32Z 102.6K followers, 53.7K engagements

"In [----] Jacob Bernoulli discovered the constant e by studying a question about compound interest which required him to find the value of the following expression (which is in fact e):"
X Link 2026-01-06T01:05Z 108.2K followers, 74.9K engagements

"Freeman Dyson of the Institute for Advanced Study told that in [----] the mathematician Oswald Veblen (18801960)a founding member of the Instituteand the physicist James Jeans (18771946) were discussing the reform of the mathematics curriculum at Princeton University. Jeans argued that they may as well cut out group theory for it would never be of any use to physics. Of course today group theory is central to many parts of physics such as quantum mechanics. Fortunately Jeanss advice was not taken. Source: Mathematical Apocrypha: Stories and Anecdotes of Mathematicians and the Mathematical by"
X Link 2026-01-11T03:20Z 74.8K followers, [----] engagements

"requirements for your existence https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2010316245263077861 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2010316245263077861"
X Link 2026-01-11T11:41Z 72.3K followers, 442.4K engagements

"Mensuration formula chart 📈 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2012843173907956003 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2012843173907956003"
X Link 2026-01-18T11:03Z 76.2K followers, 1.9M engagements

"One day two brilliant mindsJohn von Neumann and Stanislaw Ulamfound themselves in a lively argument. The topic was not equations or proofs but something far more playful: how valuable the collective brainpower at Princeton University and the nearby Institute for Advanced Study really was. Ulam tried to explain his point with a bold comparison. He said the situation reminded him of how Chicago gangsters divided up their territories. Each group controlled a different racket and each one had a price. In the same spirit he joked one area of mathematicstopologymight be worth five million dollars."
X Link 2026-01-19T02:27Z 104.1K followers, [----] engagements

"357686312646216567629137 [-----------------------] [----------------------] [---------------------] [--------------------] [-------------------] [------------------] [-----------------] [----------------] [---------------] [--------------] [-------------] [------------] [-----------] [----------] [---------] [--------] [-------] [------] [-----] [----] [---] [--] [--] These all are prime numbers. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2015031459091026079 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2015031459091026079"
X Link 2026-01-24T11:58Z 73.5K followers, 716.7K engagements

"What is wrong here https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2015070748633952530 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2015070748633952530"
X Link 2026-01-24T14:34Z 72.3K followers, 218.8K engagements

"In [----] Albert Einstein lecturing on physics to young Black students at Lincoln University"
X Link 2026-01-26T18:45Z 72.5K followers, 12K engagements

"One of mathematician John von Neumann's lecturers said "Johnny was the only student I was ever afraid of. If in the course of a lecture I stated an unsolved problem the chances were he'd come to me at the end of the lecture with the complete solution scribbled on a slip of paper." https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016052174086930867 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016052174086930867"
X Link 2026-01-27T07:34Z 75.7K followers, 122.9K engagements

"Not a single letter or number on screen https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016901021193425284 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016901021193425284"
X Link 2026-01-29T15:47Z 73.8K followers, 278.3K engagements

"Professor of Mathematics tries on mask created by student and loses it"
X Link 2026-01-30T11:02Z 75.5K followers, 6.1M engagements

"Albert Einstein once wrote that for physicists who believe in relativity the difference between past present and future is only an illusion. He shared this thought after the death of his close friend Michele Besso in [----]. This idea reflects Einsteins lifelong belief in determinism and his view of time as part of a four-dimensional space-time where all moments exist together. Einstein famously said God does not play dice showing his discomfort with the randomness of quantum mechanics even though he helped build its foundations. Today general relativity explains the large universe and quantum"
X Link 2026-01-31T07:48Z 72.5K followers, 14.1K engagements

"e is Gods function. ln(x) is the Devils function. - Calculus professor"
X Link 2026-01-31T13:22Z 72K followers, 13.5K engagements

"How that bro enters the classroom after bringing the News " Math teacher is absent today""
X Link 2026-01-31T17:10Z 106.3K followers, [----] engagements

"People usually think Albert Einstein was a genius simply because he was good at mathematics. But many scientists of his time were excellent mathematicians. What truly set Einstein apart was something elsewhat cognitive scientist Robert Sternberg calls creative intelligence. Einsteins real strength was his ability to look at problems in a new way. While others worked within accepted ideas about space and time Einstein questioned those ideas themselves. He used thought experimentslike imagining himself riding on a beam of light or thinking about clocks moving at high speedto explore"
X Link 2026-01-31T17:54Z 73.9K followers, 37K engagements

"When Albert Einstein wrote E = mc he was not just giving physics a new formula. He was revealing a hidden truth about reality itself: mass and energy are the same thing. Matter is not solid and inertit is energy tightly locked away. This idea shattered centuries of thinking. It showed that even the smallest speck of matter holds a vast reserve of power. From this single insight came an understanding of why stars burn for billions of years how nuclear reactors generate electricity and why atomic weapons release such devastating force. The equation did not invent these powers. They were always"
X Link 2026-01-31T20:11Z 74K followers, 24.7K engagements

"Paul J. Cohen recipient of the Fields Medal in [----] and a long-time professor at Stanford University was well known for his sharp witand for his frequent complaints about student laziness. One afternoon irony intervened. Cohen dozed off in his office and slept straight through the class he was scheduled to teach. When he finally woke he walked to a colleagues office next door to voice his usual grievance about students who failed to show proper discipline. Having delivered his complaint he returned to his own office and promptly fell asleep again. It was perhaps the most eloquent lecture he"
X Link 2026-02-01T01:55Z 75.7K followers, 15.6K engagements

"In [----] the Russian mathematician Yuri V. Matiyasevich discovered a wonderful and surprising formula that links to the Fibonacci numbers"
X Link 2026-02-01T04:38Z 74K followers, 94.4K engagements

"On April [--] [----] Yitang Zhang a popular math professor at the University of New Hampshire stunned the world of pure mathematics when he announced that he had proven the Bounded Gaps Conjecture. His paper shows that no matter how far one goes-one will keep finding prime pairs that differ by less than [--] million. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017868062314377247 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017868062314377247"
X Link 2026-02-01T07:50Z 73.4K followers, 37.3K engagements

"Together we are one https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017916237716848720 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017916237716848720"
X Link 2026-02-01T11:01Z 73.8K followers, 66.7K engagements

"Why kids hate Math"
X Link 2026-02-01T15:01Z 103.7K followers, 2.6M engagements

"The Frenet-Serret equations are useful for describing the derivatives of the tangent normal and binormal vectors to a curve parameterized by arc length. It turns out that a curve is entirely determined by its curvature and torsion at each point which are represented in these equations. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018081931347599624 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018081931347599624"
X Link 2026-02-01T22:00Z 74K followers, [----] engagements

"Andr Weil spiritual leader of the Institute for Advanced Study for many years set a high standard. In [----] Associate Professor Michael S. Mahoney of the History of Science Department at Princeton University had the temerity (or perhaps the bad luck) to write a biography of Pierre de Fermat (16011665). At that time Weil had been studying the history of Fermat for some time. He had given a lecture series on the subject. The depth of his understanding was uncanny: Weil had actually figured out sequences of letters that had been sent on what dates they were mailed and had arrived and who was"
X Link 2026-02-02T08:20Z 104.7K followers, 38.6K engagements

"In [----] the world of mathematics witnessed a historic moment. A mystery that had resisted every attempt for more than three centuries was finally solved. Andrew Wiles a quiet and determined professor at Oxford University announced a proof of Fermats Last Theorem. The problem had been written in [----] by the French mathematician Pierre de Fermat who claimed he had a truly marvelous proof that the margin of his book was too small to contain. For [---] years no one could find that proof. Wiles had dreamed of solving this problem since he was a child. Working mostly in isolation for years he finally"
X Link 2026-02-02T11:59Z 73.7K followers, 28.5K engagements

"This equation was searched to about N = [----] and humanity has found only Ramanujans original solutions N = [--] [--] [--] [--] [--]. It has recently been proved that these are the only ones"
X Link 2026-02-02T18:44Z 76.2K followers, 155.1K engagements

"Who needs art when math is there"
X Link 2026-02-03T00:40Z 75.2K followers, 47.3K engagements

"Pressure is directly proportional to The Number Of Days Left For the Exams. Where "I will Study tomorrow." remains constant"
X Link 2026-02-03T01:45Z 73.9K followers, [----] engagements

"Grigori Perelman mathematician who refused to accept a Fields Medal and the $1000000 Clay Prize"
X Link 2026-02-03T04:30Z 72.2K followers, [----] engagements

"While preparing for his U.S. citizenship exam the mathematician Kurt Gdel made a surprising discovery. He believed that the U.S. Constitution contained a logical weaknessan internal inconsistency that could in theory allow the country to turn into a dictatorship even though its individual articles were designed to protect democracy. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018572661241102638 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018572661241102638"
X Link 2026-02-03T06:30Z 74.2K followers, 51.9K engagements

"Like many German families after World War I the Einsteins lived very frugally. Money was scarce and nothing was wasted. Mrs. Einstein carefully saved old letters envelopes and scraps of paper so that her husband Albert Einstein would have something to write on while working through his ideas and calculations. Years later everything had changed. Einstein had become world-famous and was a founding member of the Institute for Advanced Study in the United States. Mrs. Einstein was often invited to visit important scientific centers and help with public events. She dutifully walked through one"
X Link 2026-02-03T08:33Z 104.6K followers, [----] engagements

"Stephen Hawking was born on the same day Galileo died and died on the same day Einstein was born"
X Link 2026-02-03T11:39Z 77.1K followers, 14.6K engagements

"Grace Brewster Hopper was an American computer scientist mathematician and rear admiral in the U.S. Navy. She helped shape modern programming and played a key role in creating COBOL in [----] one of the first high-level programming languages still used today"
X Link 2026-02-03T21:59Z 105K followers, [----] engagements

"I love math and wife even though most of the time they make me feel like I know nothing"
X Link 2026-02-04T01:02Z 72.1K followers, [----] engagements

"Many great minds have shaped mathematics but none quite like Carl Friedrich Gauss. He is often called the Prince of Mathematics yet his story begins far from palaces and luxury. Gauss was born on April [--] [----] in the poor city of Braunschweig Germany. His family had little money. His father was a strict hardworking man who wanted his son to earn a living not waste time on books. His mother however was kind and supportive. She believed in her son and stood by his choices for her entire life. Gauss respected both his parents and remained a polite and obedient child. One of the first people to"
X Link 2026-02-04T05:39Z 74.8K followers, 24.7K engagements

"Pure mathematicians when asked about the applications of their work: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018942111543124325 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018942111543124325"
X Link 2026-02-04T06:58Z 76.3K followers, 12.7K engagements

"(a + b) = a + 3ab + 3ab + b"
X Link 2026-02-04T07:58Z 107.5K followers, 160.6K engagements

"1233 = [--] + [--] [----] = [--] + [--] [-----] = [--] + [---] [-------] = [---] + 2353"
X Link 2026-02-04T12:23Z 100.7K followers, [----] engagements

"The Surprising Reason to Cut Marks by Math Teacher"
X Link 2026-02-04T16:49Z 74.2K followers, 15.9K engagements

"Physics professor discloses in [--] minute the full insight of Quantum Mechanics"
X Link 2026-02-04T17:45Z 74K followers, [----] engagements

"Leonhard Euler wrote [---] letters to [--] year old German Princess Friederike Charlotte over a period of two years in order to teach her math physics and sciences. These letters were later reprinted as a textbook for "every female academy in the kingdom""
X Link 2026-02-04T19:46Z 107.8K followers, 10.4K engagements

"The BaileyBorweinPlouffe formula (BBP formula) is a formula for"
X Link 2026-02-04T22:55Z 73.9K followers, [----] engagements

"37 is the 12th prime number. Its mirror [--] is the 21st prime number which is the product of [--] and 3"
X Link 2026-02-05T01:00Z 101.7K followers, 37.6K engagements

"In [----] the International Mathematical Olympiad asked famously hard questions. Out of [---] students only [--] earned any points. One of them was a 13-year-old Australian boy Terence Tao who went on to become the youngest gold medalist in IMO history. Even as a child his talent was clear: he taught counting at age two entered high school at ten graduated university at sixteen and earned a PhD by twenty-one. Tao later won the Fields Medal in [----] the highest honor in mathematics. His work ranges from prime numbers to fluid equations and he helped prove the GreenTao theorem showing that prime"
X Link 2026-02-05T02:12Z 74.9K followers, 63.4K engagements

"Is e + rational or irrational https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019250125076591088 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019250125076591088"
X Link 2026-02-05T03:22Z 105K followers, 90.5K engagements

"In [----] Albert Einstein and Marie Skodowska Curie once sat together near a calm lake talking quietly about life and science. They were old friends and their meeting brought back many memories. But their story together had begun long before that peaceful moment. In [----] Marie Curies life was shaken by tragedy. Her husband Pierre Curie was killed in a terrible accident on a Paris street when a horse-drawn cart ran him over. Marie was heartbroken. She had lost not only her husband but also her closest scientific partner. As time passed Marie found comfort in the company of Paul Langevin a gifted"
X Link 2026-02-05T04:27Z 75.7K followers, 20.7K engagements

"Good teacher"
X Link 2026-02-05T12:15Z 107.4K followers, 373.1K engagements

"Proof that ii is a real number"
X Link 2026-02-05T19:14Z 107.3K followers, 85.3K engagements

"A beautiful relationship"
X Link 2026-02-05T21:36Z 75.7K followers, 23.7K engagements

"Statisticians have discovered that the main cause of divorce is marriage"
X Link 2026-02-05T22:40Z 100.8K followers, 24.9K engagements

"Einstein's equation tells us how our universe has changed over time and offers glimpses of the earliest moments of creation. It is no surprise that it is the favorite of many scientists"
X Link 2026-02-06T01:00Z 76.2K followers, [----] engagements

"Kurt Gdel one of the greatest logicians of the 20th century was a brilliant mind living in a very fragile world of his own. Born in [----] Gdel could see deep truths in mathematics and logic that others could notbut everyday life often confused and frightened him. Simple things that most people handled easily felt dangerous to him so his friends frequently had to look after him. After many years of living in the United States Gdel decided to become an American citizen. Like all applicants he had to prepare for a citizenship interview. This meant studying the U.S. Constitution. For most people"
X Link 2026-02-06T02:25Z 74K followers, 33.3K engagements

"Paul Dirac was one of the greatest theoretical physicists. Yet what made him truly unforgettable was not only his brilliant mind but his very unusual personality. He was a man of deep logic few words and strict honestysometimes so strict that it surprised everyone around him. The Danish physicist Niels Bohr once called Dirac the strangest man after meeting him in Copenhagen. Despite their very different personalities the two formed a strong bondfirst as scientists and later as friends. Many stories from their time together still make people smile today. Dirac was famous for his clear and"
X Link 2026-02-06T03:46Z 77.1K followers, 40.3K engagements

"New triangle dropped https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019630649448231008 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019630649448231008"
X Link 2026-02-06T04:34Z 75K followers, 122.5K engagements

"The fraction was worried about marrying the decimal because he would have to convert"
X Link 2026-02-06T06:46Z 76.2K followers, [----] engagements

"Intresting https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019707672464093618 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019707672464093618"
X Link 2026-02-06T09:40Z 75.4K followers, 13.5K engagements

"When William Jovanovich (19202001) was a student at Harvard University he often ate his meals in a small cafeteria on campus. The food there was cheapand by most accounts quite awful. But for a student with little money it was a practical choice. One day Jovanovich noticed something curious. Sitting in the same cafeteria was Bertrand Russell one of the most famous mathematicians and philosophers in the world. Russell came from a wealthy and highly respected English family. He certainly did not need to eat in such a place. Jovanovichs curiosity finally got the better of him. Gathering his"
X Link 2026-02-06T10:50Z 99.8K followers, 52.4K engagements

"512 = (5 + [--] + 2) [----] = (4 + [--] + [--] + 3) [----] = (5 + [--] + [--] + 2) [-----] = (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) [-----] = (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + 3) [----] = (2 + [--] + [--] + 1) [------] = (2 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) [------] = (3 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 5) [------] = (6 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) [-------] = (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) [--------] = (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 8) [--------] = (5 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 5) [--------] = (6 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) [---------] = (2 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 6) https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019806030176338395 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2019806030176338395"
X Link 2026-02-06T16:10Z 101.8K followers, 14.2K engagements

"Trial and error method for finding the roots"
X Link 2026-02-06T18:29Z 75.1K followers, 15.3K engagements

"Jean-Baptiste Fourier (17681830) was a French mathematician and physicist best known for introducing Fourier series a way of representing a periodic function as a sum of trigonometric functions. He is also famous for his work on the theory of heat and for explaining how heat propagates. Perhaps his deep interest in heat led him to believe that warmth was beneficial to health. Toward the end of his life he wore multiple layers of clothing and kept his room so hot that it was unbearable for others. He rarely left his home. According to Theoni Pappas author of Mathematical Scandals the excessive"
X Link 2026-02-06T19:31Z 76.1K followers, [----] engagements

"From Ramanujan"
X Link 2026-02-06T21:32Z 104.6K followers, 27.1K engagements

"The Fundamental Theorem of Engineering: = [--] = e sin(x) = x cos(x) = [--] e = [--] If it's close enough then it's good enough"
X Link 2026-02-06T23:35Z 75K followers, 13.1K engagements

"There are exactly [--] seconds in six weeks"
X Link 2026-02-07T01:37Z 73K followers, [----] engagements

"In [----] during the dark days of World War II Denmark was under Nazi control. Many people fled the country to escape arrest. But Niels Bohr one of the greatest physicists of the twentieth century chose to stay in Copenhagen. He felt a deep responsibility toward his homeland and wanted to help in any way he could. Then on the night of October [--] everything changed. The Danish resistance secretly warned Bohr that the Gestapo would arrest him the next morning. There was no time to lose. That very night under the cover of darkness a brave Danish fisherman rowed Bohr across the narrow stretch of sea"
X Link 2026-02-07T02:50Z 102.8K followers, [----] engagements

"In [----] Euler discovered the following relationship which appears to glue together the prime numbers and the sequence of natural numbers in a fascinating way:"
X Link 2026-02-07T04:06Z 107.9K followers, 20.8K engagements

"1 = [--] (1 + 3) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + 5) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + 7) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + 9) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 11) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 13) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 15) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 17) = [--] = [--] (1 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + 19) = [---] = [--] https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2020131520128979141 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2020131520128979141"
X Link 2026-02-07T13:44Z 105K followers, 65K engagements

"Math book example"
X Link 2026-02-07T16:26Z 73.9K followers, [----] engagements

"THE MEME IS LEFT AS AN EXERCISE FOR THE READER"
X Link 2026-02-07T22:04Z 73.7K followers, [----] engagements

"On this day in [----] a letter crossed the seas that would change the history of mathematics. Months earlier an unknown young man from India Srinivasa Ramanujan had written to the famous British mathematician G. H. Hardy. His letter was not ordinary. It was filled with pages of strange formulas bold claims and beautiful resultswritten without formal proofs but glowing with originality. Hardy was curious. He had never seen anything quite like it. When he finally replied his words were careful but full of excitement. He told Ramanujan that he had been exceedingly interested by the letter and the"
X Link 2026-02-08T02:25Z 101.1K followers, 25.2K engagements

"Sometimes flipping the numbers makes the math much easier in your head. For example: how much is 8% of [--] Flip it: 8% of [--] = 50% of [--] And 50% just means half. Half of [--] = [--]. No calculator. No stress. This works because: A% of B = B% of A"
X Link 2026-02-08T03:30Z 75.1K followers, [----] engagements

"5 + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] + [--] = 534494836"
X Link 2026-02-08T06:27Z 75.1K followers, [----] engagements

"The Fibbonacci sequence goes: [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--] [--]. Skip the first few terms and. You can almost perfectly convert miles and kilometers"
X Link 2026-02-08T07:30Z 108.3K followers, 15.2K engagements

"http://x.com/i/article/2020439584627191808 http://x.com/i/article/2020439584627191808"
X Link 2026-02-08T10:28Z 74K followers, [----] engagements

"Math students are the nicest people"
X Link 2026-02-08T10:52Z 74K followers, [----] engagements

"1 [--] + [--] = [--] [--] [--] + [--] = [--] [---] [--] + [--] = [---] [----] [--] + [--] = [----] [-----] [--] + [--] = [-----] [------] [--] + [--] = [------] [-------] [--] + [--] = [-------] [--------] [--] + [--] = [--------] [---------] [--] + [--] = 987654321"
X Link 2026-02-08T14:53Z 75.6K followers, [----] engagements

"3816547290 divisible by [--] [---------] divisible by [--] [--------] divisible by [--] [-------] divisible by [--] [------] divisible by [--] [-----] divisible by [--] [----] divisible by [--] [---] divisible by [--] [--] divisible by [--] [--] divisible by 1"
X Link 2026-02-08T16:56Z 73.9K followers, 17K engagements

"In [----] the English mathematician John Wallis discovered a beautiful formula for . He showed that can be written as an infinite producta never-ending multiplicationof even numbers squared each divided by the two odd numbers next to it. This elegant pattern was one of the first times was expressed using an infinite product and it amazed mathematicians of his time. https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2020604801747427468 https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2020604801747427468"
X Link 2026-02-08T21:05Z 108.1K followers, 48.3K engagements

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