1200-year-old problem 'easy'
Schoolchildren from Caversham have become the first to learn a brand new
theory that dividing by zero is possible using a new number - 'nullity'. But the
suggestion has left many mathematicians cold.
BBC Homepage
UPDATED: 13:45 GMT, 12 December 2006
Dr James Anderson, from
the University of Reading's computer science department, says his new theorem
solves an extremely important problem - the problem of
nothing.
"Imagine you're landing on an aeroplane and the automatic
pilot's working," he suggests. "If it divides by zero and the computer stops
working - you're in big trouble. If your heart pacemaker divides by zero, you're
dead."
Computers simply cannot divide by zero. Try it on your calculator and
you'll get an error message.
But Dr Anderson has come up with a
theory that proposes a new number - 'nullity' - which sits outside the
conventional number line (stretching from negative infinity, through zero, to
positive infinity).
The theory of nullity is set to make all kinds of
sums possible that, previously, scientists and computers couldn't work
around.
"We've just solved a problem that hasn't been solved for
twelve hundred years - and it's that easy," proclaims Dr Anderson having
demonstrated his solution on a whiteboard at Highdown School, in Emmer
Green.
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Posted: Tue - December
12, 2006 at 09:21 AM