How Many Sides of a Pentagon Can You See?

Every fall, Math for America celebrates the great work of their math and science teachers with a gala dinner.  In addition to food, drinks, and talks from teachers, leaders, and policy makers, the event always features math puzzles to ponder while enjoying the evening’s festivities.

Pentagon Problem -- ColorHere is one of this year’s puzzles:

Suppose you are standing several miles from the Pentagon.  What is the probability you can see three sides of the building?

This is a fairly well-known puzzle with a seemingly straight-forward answer.  Consider the diagram at right.

The pentagon is shown in black, at the center.  Shown in white are the regions where only one side is visible; the regions where only two sides are visible are blue; and the regions where three sides are visible are red.

A simple “solution” is as follows.  An infinite red region is essentially equal in area to an infinite blue region, as they differ only by a finite amount: namely, the pentagon itself and three white triangles.  So from the perspective of the infinite plane, all finite regions are negligible, and the blue and red areas are equal.  Thus, there is a 50% chance you’ll see two sides, and a 50% chance you’ll see three sides.

This is the argument that some colleagues gave, and it is a nice one.  However, there’s a slight problem:  as stated, the puzzle didn’t suggest that the vantage point was a randomly selected point in the plane.  It suggested that the vantage point was a randomly selected point at a fixed distance from the pentagon!

At any finite distance from the pentagon, say D,  you are more likely to see two sides than three!  As D goes to infinity, the probabilities converge to one-half, but at any finite distance, the blue regions are always slightly larger than the red regions.

To illustrate this point, I created the following animation in Geogebra.  At small radii, the blue regions clearly occupy more area than the red regions, but as the radius increases, the respective areas start tend to converge.

So, not only was this a fun puzzle to think about,  but it became an object lesson in how important the statement of the problem can be.  And in particular, it’s a reminder of how the different ways we model random selection can make for big differences in our solutions!

Pentagon and Regions

Math Photo: Orthogonal Trajectories

Orthogonal Trajectories

This lovely photo was taken by mathematician Peter Krautzberger.  Peter knows that I enjoy photographing mathematics, so he shared this great image with me.  And he graciously let me share it here, and approved of the title.

I often admire crossing contrails high above in the sky, but I can’t say I’ve ever seen two so perpendicular!

Peter is a friend and colleague from MathBlogging.org, where he is a co-founder.  Peter also works on MathJax, and is consumed by publishing math on the web.  You can follow him on Twitter at @pkrautz.  Thank you, Peter, for sharing!

 

MT^2 2015

pih mt^2 2014 3-001I am excited to be hosting Math for America’s Master Teachers on Teaching (MT^2) event this December 10th  at the Gerald D. Fischbaum auditorium.

MT^2 is an evening of short talks from MfA Master Teachers that are meant to inspire and challenge the MfA community.  And it is a showcase of the passion and talent of that community, which now numbers nearly 1,000 teachers of math and science in New York City.

This will be the 4th annual MT^2, and the theme is Equality / Inequality.  The evening’s lineup features eight talks from middle and high school math and science teachers offering a variety of different interpretations on the theme.

I have given talks in each of the first three MT^2’s:  first, on the bad habits students learn from standardized tests; then on my relationship with change; and last year, about how to turn technology’s failures into teachable moments.  While I enjoy the challenge of presenting, I am honored to be hosting this year’s event, and I look forward to an evening of great ideas.

And Math for America hopes to live-stream the event, so stay tuned!

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