My VIPs for this week are Calcea Johnson and Ne'Kiya Jackson, two teenaged girls from New Orleans. According to an article by Asia Brown in the Deseret News, the two young women created a new proof for the Pythagorean theorem using trigonometry. When teacher Michelle Blouin Williams first started the math contest, she did not expect anyone to finish it.
Johnson
and Jackson proved her wrong when they figured out the answer in 2023. The two
girls were then seniors at St. Mary’s Academy in New Orleans, a prestigious
Catholic school for girls. The record for the school itself is beyond
outstanding as the school has maintained “a 100% acceptance rate to colleges
and 100% graduation rate for 17 years.”
The
girls were first enticed with the $500 prize. However, it was their inner drive
that took over once the work became difficult. The two girls worked for two
months to answer the problem that took “over 20 or 30 pages” to work it,
according to one mother.
Brown
said that “teachers at St. Mary’s recognized the importance of [the girls’]
work and submitted their proof to the American Mathematical Society for
recognition at a conference in March 2023, where the students presented their
work.”
In
case you are wondering what the Pythagorean theorem is and what is a proof,
Brown’s article gave the answer as follows.
In essence, the mathematical theorem
states that knowing the lengths of two sides of a right triangle enables you to
figure out the length of the third using this formula: a2 + b2
= c2.
It’s associated with Greek mathematician
Pythagoras, but evidence suggests it was known earlier, in Babylon and Iron Age
India, per Britannica. Its practical uses include construction and
architecture, two-dimensional navigation, and surveying.
A mathematical proof is exactly what it
sounds like: reasoning that proves a mathematical theorem is true. American
mathematician Daniel Kane explains proofs as being like essays, but using math.
According to the “60 Minutes”
episode, “there had been more than 300 documented proofs of the Pythagorean
Theorem using algebra and geometry, but for 2,000 years a proof using
trigonometry was thought to be impossible.”
In 1927, mathematician Elisha Loomis said
as much in his book, “The Pythagorean Proposition.” Loomis argued that there
could be no trigonometric proof of the theorem because it would be circular.
Sturt Anderson, a professor emeritus of
mathematics at Texas A&M University-Commerce, told Scientific American, “A
lot of the basic trig ‘identities’ are nothing more than Pythagoras’ theorem.”
Loomis
argued that using trigonometric functions to prove the Pythagorean theorem
would be like going in circles, but the girls differed in their opinion. They
said that “a trigonometric identity called the law of sines didn’t depend on
the Pythagorean theorem and that they could use it to prove the theorem.”
Their
accomplishment puts Johnson and Jackson into “an extremely small group” of
people who have accomplished the same feat. Mathematician Jason Zimba created a
new proof in 2009. After they submitted their proof for final peer review this
spring, they continued to work on more proofs. Johnson and Jackson laugh at the
idea that they are geniuses. They prefer to consider their accomplishment as “a
great mathematical achievement.”
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