1. Pascal's Triangle
2. Fibonacci Numbers
3. Triangular Numbers
4. Von Koch's Snowflake Curve
5. Zeno's Paradoxes
6. Tesseracts
7. Morley's Theorem (Introduction to Geometry, by Coxeter)
8. Four Famous Problems of Antiquity
9. Amicable Numbers
10. Perfect Numbers
11. Lucas Numbers
12. Dr. Matrix (Found in books written by Martin Gardner)
13. Platonic Solids
14. Archimedean Solids
15. Pathagorian Tripples
16. Flexagons
17. Tangrams (Found in books written by Sam Loyd)
18. Klein Bottle
19. Mobius Strip
20. Konigsberg Bridge Problem
21. Mersenne Primes
22. Google
23. Google Plex
24. Golden Section
25. Goldbach's Conjecture
26. Jordan Curve
27. Circle of Apollonius
28. Witch of Agnesi
29. Nicolas Bourbaki
30. The Four Color Problem
31. Buffon's Needle Problem
32. Sieve of Eratosthenes
33. Polytopes (Books written by Coxeter)
34. Magic Squares
35. Hypatia of Alexandria
36. Hamilton Circuits
37. Mascheroni Constructions
38. Diophantine Equations
39. Tower of Hanoi
40. Veitch Diagrams (Information is very hard to find.)
41. Sierpinski's Gasket
42. Desargues' Theorem
43. Fermat's Last Theorem
44. Nine-Point Circle
45. Bertrand Russell
46. Borromean Rings
You didn't say what class you are taking so I posted topics from several branches of mathematics.
Here is a helpful link:
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/
Here is a link to my math group if you have other questions:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/School_Mathematics_Study_Group/
2006-09-01 18:55:57
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answer #1
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answered by Jerry M 3
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Why don't you do it on the history of numbers. And the big debate about "0". How people would discuss how can something that does not exist can exist? Then negative integers came into the situation and mathematics manifested itself into the state it is now. How mathematics is the answer to life. LOGIC
2006-09-02 00:31:53
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answer #2
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answered by Mitchell B 4
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Investigate the measurements, over the centuries, of the size of the earth.
2006-09-02 00:28:50
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Investigate the really GOOD measurements, over the last couple of years, of the size of the earth.
2006-09-02 00:51:06
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answer #4
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answered by Fred S 2
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Make a magic Square or a sudoku.your math teacher will be impressed and it is NOT from the 11th or 12th syllabus.
good luck for your project,Ashley
2006-09-02 09:23:15
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answer #5
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answered by Siva 1
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How about mathematical patterns that appear in nature? I heard somewhere that the Fibbonacci sequence can be applied to the spiral pattern in sunflowers.
2006-09-02 00:29:25
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answer #6
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answered by dunearcher212 2
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what about VEDIC MATHEMATICS
It is an interesting subject. Its all about calculations from small addition, multiplications, divisions to integrations for engenering subjects
Pls search the below links for more detais
Pls mail me if u like this subject
vishnu_20102000@yahoo.com
2006-09-02 01:04:57
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answer #7
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answered by vishnu m 1
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write the history the the famous last statement of fermat.
it was solved by wiles couple of years ago.
google for it. : Fermat Wiles
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/proof/wiles.html
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Fermat's_last_theorem.html
and of course :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermat's_last_theorem
2006-09-02 00:54:57
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answer #8
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answered by gjmb1960 7
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sorry i can't help
2006-09-02 00:53:56
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answer #9
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answered by akansha a 2
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