Mathematics tabloid refers to interesting tabloids related to mathematics. The main contents are: mathematical knowledge, mathematicians' stories, interesting mathematical problems, mathematicians' famous sayings, etc. You can use handwritten newspapers, computer printing, newspaper clippings, Olympic math questions and other forms.
Mathematics tabloid is demanding and difficult, so students had better finish it with their parents. But it can't be a single form. We should apply what we have learned and not blindly and rigidly imitate old-fashioned forms.
common material
1. Archimedes, an ancient Greek scholar, died at the hands of Roman enemy soldiers who attacked Sicily. ), people carved the figure of the ball in the cylinder on his tombstone to commemorate his discovery that the volume and surface area of the ball are two-thirds of that of the circumscribed cylinder.
Archimedes was born in Syracuse, Sicily, at the southern tip of the Italian peninsula in 287 BC. Father is a mathematician and astronomer. Archimedes had a good family upbringing since childhood. 1 1 years old, was sent to study in Alexandria, the cultural center of Greece. In this famous city called "the Capital of Wisdom".
Ju Lushi was born in 624 BC. He was the first famous mathematician in ancient Greece. He used to be a shrewd businessman. After he accumulated considerable wealth by selling olive oil, Cyrus devoted himself to scientific research and travel. He is diligent and studious, and at the same time he is not superstitious about the ancients. He has the courage to explore and create, and actively thinks about problems.
Galois was born in a town not far from Paris. His father is the principal of this school and has served as the mayor for many years. The influence of family makes Galois always brave and fearless. 1823, 12-year-old galois left his parents to study in Paris. Not content with boring classroom indoctrination, he went to find the most difficult mathematics original research by himself.
7. The Swiss mathematician Jacques Bernoulli studied the spiral (known as the thread of life) before his death. After his death, a logarithmic spiral was carved on the tombstone, and the inscription also said, "Although I have changed, I am the same as before." This is a pun, which not only describes the essence of spiral, but also shows his love for mathematics.