Maths on the Back of an Envelope

Maths on the Back of an Envelope
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‘Another terrific book by Rob Eastaway’ SIMON SINGH‘A delightfully accessible guide to how to play with numbers’ HANNAH FRYHow many cats are there in the world?What's the chance of winning the lottery twice?And just how long does it take to count to a million?Learn how to tackle tricky maths problems with nothing but the back of an envelope, a pencil and some good old-fashioned brain power.Join Rob Eastaway as he takes an entertaining look at how to figure without a calculator. Packed with amusing anecdotes, quizzes, and handy calculation tips for every situation, Maths on the Back of an Envelope is an invaluable introduction to the art of estimation, and a welcome reminder that sometimes our own brain is the best tool we have to deal with numbers.

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Rob Eastaway. Maths on the Back of an Envelope

Copyright

CONTENTS

PROLOGUE. HOW MANY CATS?

1. THE PERILS OF PRECISION. ENVELOPES VERSUS CALCULATORS

TEST YOURSELF

SPURIOUS PRECISION

PRECISION VERSUS ACCURACY

DRESSING UP NUMBERS WITH DRESSAGE

A NUMBER IS ONLY AS STRONG AS ITS WEAKEST LINK

BODY TEMPERATURE A BIT LOW? BLAME IT ON SPURIOUS PRECISION

VARIABILITY

SENSITIVITY

EXPONENTIAL GROWTH

CLIMATE CHANGE AND COMPLEXITY

MAD COWS AND MAD FORECASTS

DOES THIS NUMBER MAKE SENSE?

THE CASE FOR BACK-OF-ENVELOPE THINKING

2. TOOLS OF THE TRADE. THE ESSENTIAL TOOLS OF ESTIMATION

ARE YOU AN ARITHMETICIAN?

TEST YOURSELF

BASIC ARITHMETIC. ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION

MULTIPLICATION AND TIMES TABLES

Tip 1

Tip 2

Tip 3

Tip 4

Tip 5

TEST YOURSELF

DIVISION

DECIMALS AND FRACTIONS. PLACE VALUE AND DECIMAL POINTS

DECIMAL POINTS – A MATTER OF LIFE OR DEATH?

MULTIPLYING FRACTIONS

TEST YOURSELF

PERCENTAGES

Tip 1

Tip 2

Tip 3

Tip 4

TEST YOURSELF

REMOVING VAT

CALCULATING WITH POWERS OF TEN. MULTIPLICATION

TEST YOURSELF

DIVIDING BY LARGE NUMBERS

TEST YOURSELF

USING ‘STANDARD FORM’ FOR LARGE NUMBERS

TEST YOURSELF

STAR WARS POWER

KNOW YOUR MEGAS FROM YOUR TERAS

KEY FACTS

TEST YOURSELF

ZEQUALS

A NEW MATHEMATICAL SYMBOL h

TEST YOURSELF

CALCULATING WITH ZEQUALS

TEST YOURSELF

THE INACCURACY OF ZEQUALS

TEST YOURSELF

WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE? (PART 1)

3. EVERYDAY ESTIMATION. ESTIMATION AND MONEY. SHOPPING BILLS AND SPREADSHEETS

TEST YOURSELF

HOW CAN THAT SHOP STILL BE IN BUSINESS?

SAVING, BORROWING AND PERCENTAGES

DOUBLE YOUR MONEY – THE RULE OF 72

CONVERTING CURRENCY

ESTIMATING SIZE. ESTIMATING DISTANCES

1. The Dropped-Stone Method

2. The Finger Method

3. The Crisp-Packet Method

CIRCLES AND PI

AREAS AND SQUARE ROOTS

TEST YOURSELF

WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE? (PART 2)

METRIC AND IMPERIAL CONVERSIONS. WHO NEEDS IMPERIAL?

THE MARS ORBITER FIASCO

MILES AND KILOMETRES

How To Remember Your Conversions

BACK-OF-ENVELOPE CONVERSIONS

TEST YOURSELF

A QUIRKY METHOD FOR MILE–KILOMETRE CONVERSION

ESTIMATION AND STATISTICS. AVERAGES AND UNCERTAINTY

WORKING OUT PROBABILITY

BACK-OF-ENVELOPE SURVEYS

HOW LONG WILL WE BE IN THIS QUEUE?

THE CHANCE OF MULTIPLE EVENTS

SPOTTING TRENDS

PREMIER LEAGUE GOALS: CERTAINTY WITHIN UNCERTAINTY

4. FIGURING WITH FERMI. THE FERMI APPROACH

COUNTING

HOW MANY WORDS ARE THERE IN YOUR FAVOURITE BOOK?

HOW MANY HAIRS ARE THERE ON AN ADULT HUMAN’S HEAD?

DO MORE PEOPLE GO TO FOOTBALL MATCHES AT THE WEEKEND THAN GO TO CHURCH?

HOW MANY TENNIS BALLS ARE USED AT WIMBLEDON?

HOW MANY ATTENDED DONALD TRUMP’S INAUGURATION?

WHAT ARE THE CHANCES?

WHAT’S THE CHANCE OF WINNING THE LOTTERY TWICE?

THE EXACT ODDS OF WINNING A LOTTERY

WHAT WERE THE CHANCES OF THE ORKNEY BABIES?

WHAT’S THE CHANCE OF TWO HOLES IN ONE?

WHAT’S THE CHANCE OF DEALING OUT FOUR ‘PERFECT’ HANDS?

ENERGY, CLIMATE AND THE ENVIRONMENT

WHAT USES THE MOST ENERGY AROUND THE HOUSE?

HOW MANY KETTLES IN A LIFETIME?

HOW MUCH FRESH WATER IS FLUSHED DOWN LONDON TOILETS EVERY DAY?

COWS VERSUS HUMANS – WHICH EMITS THE MOST METHANE?

HOW MANY PLANES ARE IN THE SKY AT THE MOMENT?

CAN WE PLANT A TRILLION TREES?

FERMI FOR THE FUN OF IT

HOW LONG TO COUNT TO A MILLION?

HOW OFTEN DOES A TEENAGER SAY ‘LIKE’ IN ONE YEAR?

ARE YOU DESCENDED FROM RICHARD III?

HOW MUCH FURTHER CAN YOU THROW A SHOT PUT WHEN YOU ARE IN MEXICO CITY?

WHERE ARE THE ALIENS?

LAST WORD. WHEN THE ROBOTS TAKE OVER. THE COUNTDOWN CONUNDRUM

APPENDIX. SIGNIFICANT FIGURES

WHERE THE RULE OF 72 COMES FROM

WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE? (PART 2)

RANGE OF A SHOT PUT

HOW LONG TO COUNT TO A MILLION?

ANSWERS AND TIPS. ENVELOPES VERSUS CALCULATORS

ARE YOU AN ARITHMETICIAN?

MULTIPLICATION AND TIMES TABLES

MULTIPLYING FRACTIONS

PERCENTAGES

MULTIPLICATION

DIVIDING BY LARGE NUMBERS

USING STANDARD FORM FOR LARGE NUMBERS

KEY FACTS

ZEQUALS

CALCULATING WITH ZEQUALS

INACCURACY OF ZEQUALS

SHOPPING BILLS AND SPREADSHEETS

AREAS AND SQUARE ROOTS

BACK-OF-ENVELOPE CONVERSIONS

Endnotes. 1: THE PERILS OF PRECISION

2: TOOLS OF THE TRADE

3: EVERYDAY ESTIMATION

4: FIGURING WITH FERMI

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

Отрывок из книги

A few years ago, at a school event, I asked the audience of teenagers to submit some estimation questions that I would then attempt to answer live on stage. One pupil posed this simple question: ‘How many cats are there in the world?’

Cats are always a popular topic, so I took it on.

.....

The figure 98.6 came from the translation of Wunderlich’s report into English. At the time, Fahrenheit was the commonly used scale in Britain. To convert 37 °C to Fahrenheit, you multiply by 9, divide by 5 and add 32; i.e. 37 °C converts to 98.6 °F. So the English translation – which reached a far bigger audience than the German original, gave the figure 98.6 °F as the human norm. Technically, they were right to do this, but the decimal place created a misleading impression. If Wunderlich had quoted the temperature as 37.0 °C, it would have been reasonable to quote this as 98.6 °F, but Wunderlich deliberately didn’t quote his rough figure to the decimal place. For a figure that can vary by nearly a whole degree between healthy individuals, 98.6 °F was (and is) spurious precision. And in any case, a study in 2015 using modern, more accurate thermometers, found that we’ve been getting it wrong all these years, and that the average human temperature is 98.2 °F, not 98.6 °F.

In the General Election of May 2017, there was a shock result in London’s Kensington constituency. The sitting MP was a Conservative with a healthy majority, but in the small hours of the Friday, news came through that the result was too close to call, and there was going to be a recount. Hours later, it was announced that there needed to be a second recount. And then, when even that failed to resolve the result, the staff were given a few hours to get some sleep, and then returned for a third recount the following day.

.....

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