How to Design an Engaging Cover for a Mathematics Paper?

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The discussion revolves around preparing an exhibition display for a paper titled "A Passion for Numbers," focusing on mathematics. The author seeks creative ideas to attract visitors to their paper, aiming for a balance between artistic appeal and mathematical significance. Suggestions include creating a Fibonacci spiral with thread or exploring fractals like the Julia Set. The conversation touches on the beauty of mathematical equations, comparing Euler's identity to famous physics equations, and highlights the importance of connecting the display to the paper's content. The exchange emphasizes the potential depth in seemingly simple artistic representations of mathematical concepts.
curious mind 111
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hello, a bit of topic. we're having an exhibition at my university to display outstanding papers. my paper was about my passion for mathematics. I am seeking some ideas to make visitors want to read my paper. I don't want something too childish. I was thinking of making a string model of some equation or possibly fibbonacci sequence, but I didnt find anything on the web. Or maybe i do a painting as the back
 
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Childish is a personal view. There can be a lot of insight in a "childish" drawing. But what is your paper about? Shouldn't the cover be related to the content? Here's a proposal connected to the Fibonacci sequence:

daisy-spiral.jpg


Source: https://sharoncas.wordpress.com/2012/06/28/non-linear-pattern-web-quest-alg-4c1-7/
 
Thank you for your reply :) My paper is entitled "a passion for numbers" it's about, well, my passion for math. so i was thinking of making a fibonacci spiral with thread or maybe something else but of mathematical significance. something beautiful and artistic.
 
The mathematical equivalence to ##E = m\cdot c^2## is Euler's identity
$$e^{i \pi} = -1$$
And here is something funny I once found:
$$2^n+7^n+8^n+18^n+19^n+24^n=3^n+4^n+12^n+14^n+22^n+23^n \text{ for } n =0,1,...,5$$
 
curious mind 111 said:
something beautiful and artistic.
Try fractals, in particular a "Julia Set".
 
I personally like this formula involving the Fibonacci sequence and two other sequences:
$$
\sum_{n\in\mathbb{N}}\frac{F_n}{n}\cdot\frac{L_n}{n}\cdot\frac{1}{(n+1)C_n} = \frac{(2\pi)^2}{\sqrt{5}^5}
$$
where ##F_n## is the Fibonacci sequence, ##L_n## the Lucas sequence and ##C_n## the Catalan sequence. You will find their definitions, e.g. on Wikipedia.
 
Thanks for the great ideas. I'll keep u updated on what i settle on.
Best
 
fresh_42 said:
The mathematical equivalence to ##E = m\cdot c^2## is Euler's identity
$$e^{i \pi} = -1$$
Why are they equivalent?
 
pinball1970 said:
Why are they equivalent?
They are not literally equivalent. I meant, they are equally famous as THE equation in physics, resp. mathematics.
 
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  • #10
fresh_42 said:
They are not literally equivalent. I meant, they are equally famous as THE equation in physics, resp. mathematics.
Good! I was thinking what the hell!? They both have 'e' buts it's a different E!
 
  • #11
pinball1970 said:
Good! I was thinking what the hell!? They both have 'e' buts it's a different E!
Who knows? e is a pretty natural quantity. Maybe someone finally finds a connection.
 
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  • #12
What happened in 1874?
 
  • #13
Frabjous said:
What happened in 1874?
If the family of integral curves of the differential equation ##M\,dx + N\,dy = 0## is left unaltered by the group ##Uf \equiv \xi \dfrac{df}{dx}+\eta \dfrac{df}{dy},## ##\dfrac{1}{\xi M+\eta N}## is an integrating factor of the differential equation. (M.S. Lie, Christiania 1874)
 
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  • #14
I was banking on 'trams.'

The integral curve thing did not occur to me...
 
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