Saturday, March 27, 2010

Congratulations to Mr. Babbitt!

Albany Area Math Circle advisor Bill Babbitt has been accepted into the PhD program in Multidisciplinary Science at RPI.

This excellent news arrived yesterday, an especially auspicious and appropriate day, because it was the birthday of Paul Erdős, a brilliant mathematician who came out of the Hungarian tradition of math circles and whose life work embodied two central values of Albany Area Math Circle, collaboration and mentoring younger students.

Charles Krautheimer's tribute in the Washington Post describes Paul Erdős' devotion to those values especially well:


He seemed sentenced to a life of solitariness from birth, on the day of which his two sisters, age 3 and 5, died of scarlet fever, leaving him an only child, doted upon and kept at home by a fretful mother. Hitler disposed of nearly all the rest of his Hungarian Jewish family. And Erdös never married. His Washington Post obituary ends with this abrupt and rather painful line: "He leaves no immediate survivors."

But in reality he did: hundreds of scientific collaborators and 1,500 mathematical papers produced with them. An astonishing legacy in a field where a lifetime product of 50 papers is considered quite extraordinary.

...

Erdös was unusual in yet one other respect. The notion of the itinerant, eccentric genius, totally absorbed in his own world of thought, is a cliche that almost always attaches to the adjective "anti-social." From Bobby Fischer to Howard Hughes, obsession and misanthropy seem to go together.

Not so Erdös. He was gentle, open and generous with others. He believed in making mathematics a social activity. Indeed, he was the most prolifically collaborative mathematician in history. Hundreds of colleagues who have published with him or been advised by him can trace some breakthrough or insight to an evening with Erdös, brain open.

...

Erdös didn't just share his genius. He shared his money. It seems comical to say so because he had so little. But, in fact, it is rather touching. He had so little because he gave away everything he earned. He was a soft touch for whatever charitable or hard-luck cause came his way. In India, he once gave away the proceeds from a few lectures he had delivered there to Ramanujan's impoverished widow.

A few years ago, Graham tells me, Erdös heard of a promising young mathematician who wanted to go to Harvard but was short the money needed. Erdös arranged to see him and lent him $1,000. (The sum total of the money Erdös carried around at any one time was about $30.) He told the young man he could pay it back when he was able to. Recently, the young man called Graham to say that he had gone through Harvard and now was teaching at Michigan and could finally pay the money back. What should he do?

Graham consulted Erdös. Erdös said, "Tell him to do with the $1,000 what I did."

No survivors indeed.





Mr. Babbitt will be working under the direction of RPI Professors Ron Eglash and Mukkai Krishnamoorthy. Professor Eglash has an Erdos number of 3, via his collaboration with Albany Area Math Circle advisorProfessor Krishnamoorthy, who has an Erdos number of 2.

What a wonderful legacy and tradition.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

ARML Power Contest Results

February ARML Power Contest results have been posted: Albany Area Math Circle tied for second place in the February round among the 60-plus teams that participated in the contest. Combining that awesome result with the AAMC tie for 8th place in the November round gave Albany Area Math Circle a tie for fourth place overall for the year! The top ten teams on the list below will receive trophies at ARML in June.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

State MATHCOUNTS highlights



Congratulations to all the terrific students from all over the state who competed at MATHCOUNTS on Saturday, and especially to the first place team, Bay Trails, whose students and coaches are shown above. Their coach will coach the New York State Team at the National MATHCOUNTS Competition to be held in Orlando Florida in May.




Allen Liu from the Bay Trails team, shown at the front center in the top photo above and at left in the photo immediately above, won first place on the individual rankings. Allen made NYS MATHCOUNTS history as the first sixth grader ever to win the state championship.



Congratulations also to all the top scorers on the written portion of the contest. Shown above are Maria Geba with eighth place trophy, Aniket Tolpadi from Albany Area Math Circle with fifth place trophy, Allen Liu with first place trophy, Richard Yip with fourth place trophy, Bailey Liao with third place trophy, and Thomas Dunbach with second place trophy. Shown below are students with the remainder of the top ten trophies. Albany Area Math Circle's Matthew Gu is at left holding the tenth place trophy. I am still not sure of the names and ranks of the remaining top ten students. (If their coaches email me with their names and ranks at mathcircle@yahoo.com, I would be happy to edit this post to recognize them here. We also hope to see many of them at NYSML next month.)




All told, Albany Area Math Circle had four students in the top 20 including Cecilia Holodak (Van Antwerp Middle School) and Philip Sun (Acadia Middle School), as well as Aniket Tolpadi from Iroquois Middle School and Matt Gu from Farnsworth Middle School.



Trophies were awarded to the top six teams. Iroquois is shown above with their sixth place team trophies and their student coach Anagha Tolpadi. Team members were Vineet Vinandula, Shreya Arora, Suman Padhi, Norman Xiong (alternate), and Aniket Tolpadi (Captain). Albany Area Math Circle member Elizabeth Parizh also helped to coach the team.

Acadia's team (shown below) was right behind Iroquois on the honor list in seventh place. Albany Area Math Circle students Felix Sun and Eric Wang coached the Acadia team, whose members included: Troy Wang, David Luo, Jerry Qu, and Philip Sun.



Van Antwerp also finished very well, placing on the honor list in the top third of the participating teams. The photo below shows Albany Area Math Circle student coach Dave Bieber with team captain/high scorer Cecilia Holodak and Martin Shreiner. Other students on their team includes Rajesh Bollapragada and William Wei.




Other students from our middle school math circles competing at state included Jien Ogawa from Home Educators Enrichment Group and Thomas Glozman from Maple Avenue Middle School in Saratoga Springs (Tri-County Chapter.) We are proud of all of you.




NOTE: The results above did not come directly from the computer-printed scoresheets handed out after the contest, because those sheets had some errors and inconsistencies. I have still not received a clear and consistent top 20 student and team list from NYS MATHCOUNTS officials, but I know the reputation of the veteran scoring team and I am confident they carefully checked the results for the top team and top four students very carefully by hand before the trophies were handed out. I used coaches' notes and photos from the awards ceremony to reconstruct the results above. Other coaches are invited to let me know of any errors or omissions in my reporting by sending email to mathcircle@yahoo.com.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Aniket Tolpadi


A remarkable sportsmanship you displayed on Saturday.
Nice disposition to Mathematics you have been showing all along.
Incredible maturity you have.
Knack to do complex mathematical problems -in your head so fast - you have this too.
Excellent performance in the recent NYSML tournament - you did
These are a few of the qualities you have

Many more productive mathematical and scientific years to you.

Acrostic composed by Professor Moorthy!

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Former math olympian shares the biggest prize in medicine



In 1974, Eric Lander was a high school student in New York State. Thanks to the advocacy of Professor Nura Turner from what is now the University at Albany (then called Albany State Teachers' College), he had the opportunity to be on the first US team to represent our country at the International Math Olympiad, where he won a silver medal.

Now he is the President of the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. Today's Albany Times Union reports that he won a share of the biggest prize in medicine in this country:

ALBANY -- Three scientists who led the effort to map the human genome will receive the Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research. The prize winners were announced today by James J. Barba, president of Albany Medical Center and chairman of the prize selection committee.

The winners are David Botstein, PhD., director of the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics at Princeton University; Dr. Francis S. Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health; and Eric Steven Lander, PhD., president of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. The researchers will share the $500,000 prize, the largest award in medicine in the United States. They will receive the prize on April 23 during a ceremony at Albany Medical Center.

The three scientists are responsible for proposing the idea of mapping the human genome, discovering the techniques to carry it out and managing the project to completion.

Botstein, a geneticist, was among the first to propose the concept of building a complete genetic map of humans. In 1980, he and three colleagues described how to make a detailed map of the genetic diseases caused by just one gene. His idea and mapping techniques laid the groundwork for the project.

Lander, a mathematician, developed advanced gene-mapping techniques and, in 1987, described how to map complex multi-gene diseases like diabetes and heart disease. His lab was a leading contributor to the project.

Collins, a physician and biologist, developed a technique for identifying particular disease-related genes known as positional cloning. With collaborators, he made the landmark 1989 discovery of the gene that causes cystic fibrosis. In 1993, Collins was named director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health and oversaw the Human Genome Project to its completion in 2003.


If you're curious about his path from mathematics to biology, check out this New York Times article.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Congratulations to Albany Area AIME qualifiers



AIME Qualifiers:

Andrew Ardito 126/120 (homeschool)
Matthew Babbitt 121 (homeschool)
Dave Bieber 115.5/118.5 (Niskayuna High School)
Shiwen (Heidi) Chen 111 (Emma Willard School)
So Yeun (Ashley) Cho 115.5 (Emma Willard School)
Peixuan Guo 106.5 (Bethlehem High School)
Gurtej Kanwar 106.5 (Bethlehem High School)
Preston Law 108 (homeschool)
Jeemin (Ann) Lim 88.5 (Emma Willard School)
Zubin Mukerjee 90 (Guilderland High School)
Adam Parower 91.5/100.5 (Shaker High School)
Paul Rapoport 94.5 (Albany Academy)
Gili Rusak 90 (Shaker Junior High School)
Schuyler Smith 117/127.5 (homeschool)
Felix Sun 108/100.5 (Shenendehowa High School)
Aniket Tolpadi 88.5 (Iroquois Middle School)
Jay White 97.5/99/100% on USAMTS (homeschool)
Jenny Xie 95 (Shenendehowa High School)

All of the students listed above qualified for the American Invitational Math Exam based on AMC12A and/or AMC12B scores. Both contests were exceptionally difficult this year.

The AMC10A and AMC10B contests were also exceptionally challenging this year. Although we do not know of any AIME qualifiers on the 10A or 10B this year, we would like to congratulate the following students who were high scorers in our area for their outstanding performances on the contests.

AMC10 high scorers:



Zhixing (Wanwan) Fei (Emma Willard School) 114 on 10A
Greg Hickey (Shaker High School) 114 on 10B
Elizabeth Parizh (Niskayuna High School) 112.5 on 10B
Zubin Mukerjee (Guilderland High School) 111 on 10A
Philip Sun (Acadia Middle School) 106.5 on 10B
Gili Rusak (Shaker Junior High) 105 on 10A
Wyatt Smith (homeschool) 105 on 10A and 10B
Preston Law (homeschool) 103.5 on 10B
Aniket Tolpadi (Iroquois Middle School) 102 on 10A
Jien Ogawa (homeschool) 99 on 10A
William Wang (Farnsworth Middle School) 96 on 10A
Gabe Holodak (Niskayuna High School) 96 on 10B
Cecilia Holodak (Van Antwerp Middle School) 94.5 on 10B
Hannah Liu (Guilderland High School) 94.5 on 10B

PS If there's anyone omitted because I didn't receive results from contests taken at their school, or to accidental oversight, please let me know and I'll happily add them!

Images above created in http://www.wordle.net/create

Saturday, March 6, 2010

NYSML 2010 is five weeks away!



Are you in the picture?

Albany Area Math Circle students listed in the wordle.com picture above have already signed up to participate in NYSML on Saturday April 10.

Albany Area Math Circle members who plan to participate should use the form at this link to sign up!