So, Stephone I'm goingtodraw a linefromthecentertowhere I hitandmaybeforthefuture.
I'm justgonnacallthatdistance H forThat's thedistanceofmyhit.
Andthenwhat I'm goingtodoisdraw a cordofthecirclethat's perpendiculartothisline.
That's ourcourt, andourruleisthatthelengthofthiscordisthenewdiameterofthecircle, whichinthiscase, because I had a goodshot, right, theshotwasniceandclosetothecenter.
I'm goingtostartwriting a littlebitof a chartwhere I'm goingtokeeptrackoftheradiusofeachbull's eye, and I'm gonnakeeptrackofjustthehitlengthandeachpoint.
Andsotheradiusstartsoffisoneandthatfirsthit.
It's a it's a randompoint.
Let's justgiveit a namefornow.
Let's sayitgoesthere.
That's H zerosothe h zeroandbythePythagoreantheorem, ifwewanttodescribewhatthisisintermsof X and Y, whichwillbehelpfulforlaterontobethinkingofit.
Intermsofthat, it's thesquarerootof X squared.
That's why I squared.
Ifthosearethecoordinatesofyourfirstshotandbecausewe'regonnahaveothershots, I'm alsogonnagivetheseguys a subscript.
Sonowit's a geometryquestionasked, What's thenewradius?
Maybewecallthisourzerothradiusnight, and I wanttoknowwhat's thenextradiusafterthatinitialshot.
Andifweremember a rule, theysay, youdrivethecordandthecourtwasdefinedtobeperpendiculartothat.
Youhave a questionabout a pairofnumbers, andyou'regainingintuitionandusingfactsthatwe'vediscoveredinmath, liketheareaof a circle, bythinkingofthatnotastwoseparateentitiesbutis a singlepointintwodimensionalspace.
Thequestionthatwewanttoaskrightnowiswhat's thevolumeof a fourdimensionalsphereorthefourdimensionalequivalentofvolumeinsteadofsayinghypervolumearecomingupwith a newword, theyjustsayvolume.
Youcouldfancifullysaymeasure, butwe'rejustgoingtosayvolumeof a four D sphere.
There's a wholeinterestingdiscussionthatwecouldhaveaboutthevolumesofhigherdimensionalspears, thesurfaceareasortheanalogofsurfaceareasofhigherdimensionalspheresandwheretheycomefrom.
Sothere's someviewersrightnow, especiallyiftheremaybe a littlebitfreshoffof a calculusclassorifthey'reparticularlyingratiatedtothenumber E.
Whowouldjustseesomethingscreamingintheirhead.
Rightnow, there's somethingknownasthetailorSiri's for E tothe X, whichisthatit's oneplus X andalreadyis X tothe 1/1 factorial X squaredovertwofactorial X cubedoverthreefactorialandsoon, whereyouevaluatedasaninfinitepolynomialwhereeachoneofthetermsisoneover n factorial.
It's notjustthateachoftheexhappenstoequalthis.
I actuallythinkthehealthierwaytoviewtheexponentialfunctionandwhateventheexes.
Thisdefinesitright?
Thisisthethingthatshouldpopintoyourheadwhenyouthinkofexponentialgrowthand e tothe X isthisparticularinfiniteseries, thisparticularpolynomial.
Soallthisishis E tothepiefourths, whichifwegoon, weplugitinto a calculator.
Approximatelyequals 2.1932 onandon.
Whichistosay, ifyouare a terriblerandomdartsplayerwhounrealisticallyhitswithin a squarewith a uniformprobability, whichhewouldn't becauseitwouldberotationalsymmetric.
Butwhateveryou'rehittingwithin a squareandyoukeepgoinglikethisandyouplay 1000 gamesonaverage, yourscorewouldbe 2.1932 Andremembermyscorewasforsoyou'reyou'renotquitetwiceasgoodassomeonewhohasabsolutelynoskillwhatsoever.
I couldn't askfor a betterrecommendation.
Uh, yeah, that's that's aboutright.
Sothere's a couplethings I likeaboutthispuzzle, thereasonthat I wanttorelayit.
Whatwashappeningisyouhadsixnumbersandyouwereencoding a propertyofthosesixnumberswithsomethingthatweliketodescribegeometrically, ratherthansayingthesumoftheirsquaresislessthanone, yousayitshowsupinside a sixdimensionalballthatalsomeansitsavedyousomework.
I putoutthisquestiontolikesomeChannelsupportersas a earlyteaserofthings, andoneofthemgotbacktomesaying, Youknow, I'vebeenworkingonitandit's justlike, reallyhard.
What's happeningishe's rediscoveringthevolumeof a fourdimensionalball, right, soitgives a moreuniversallanguageforpeopletotalkwithonthatitcameaboutfromtwodimensionalgeometry.
Nothingaboutthedartboardisfourdimensional, and I thinkit's just a commonmisconceptionthatpeoplelisteningtomathematiciansdescribethingslikemanifoldsinfourdimensions.
Ortheparkor a conjecturehasbeenansweredforeverythingexceptfourdimensions.
Theydon't actuallycareabout a thingwhereyoucouldmoveinfourdimensions.
It's aboutencodingquadrupletsofpoints, andthe 2nd 1 isthat I thinkithelpsbuild a healthyrelationshipwith E, becausethisseriesismuchmoreimportantthanthenumberitself.
I'm I might I mightevenjustaskedthepuzzle, andthenwewon't answerit, butit's a goodthingtoendon.
Isthatlessthanoneyoucanplay a muchsimplerprobabilitygamewere.
Let's say I'm justgonnachoosenumbersfrom 0 to 1 withuniformedprobability, and I'm gonnakeepgoinguntilthesomeofthenumbersthat I'vechosenendsupbeingbiggerthanone.
So, forexample, ifthefirstnumberyouchooseis 0.3 andthenthe 2nd 1 is 10.6, theirsummits 0.9, andifthenextoneyouchooseis 10.5, that's thepointwhenyougooverandsothequestionyoucanaskis, what's theexpectednumberofsamplesyouneedtotakebeforeitoverblows?
Oneheshowsupintheanswer.
That, andthewayitshowsupisactuallyquitesimilarhere, andit's a waythat's distilledbecauseitdoesn't involvecircles.
Sothere's nottheconfusingfactorofpie.
YouseemuchmorepristinelythefactorialSze.
Veryimportantisthat I mentionedwherethispuzzlecomesfrom.
I sawthisonTwitter.
I thinkitwasGregEgan.
Hespecificallydesigned a puzzlesuchthattheanswerwouldlooklikeaddingupthevolumesofhigherdimensionalballs.
Whenthenumberofdimensionsisevenandeveryonewhohas a healthyrelationshipwith E looksatthis a thingtothepowerindividebyinfactorialtheyscreamintheirmindtheexponentialfunctionwiththe E tothe X right, andititsortofasksyoutoaddthem, whichis a weirdthingtodo.
Whywouldyoudothat?
It's verystrange.
What?
Howdoyoueveninterpretthesumoftheareaof a circletothevolumeof a fourdimensionalsphere s o?
Hespecificallydesigned a puzzlesuchthatthiswouldbetheanswer, which I thinkisbeautifulandclever.
Here's a veryinterestingthing.
We'readdingupallofthesevolumes, right?
ItconvergesonWhatthatmeansisthathigherandhigheroutthevolumeof a highdimensionalsphereisquitesmall.
Butinfactwecouldcomputeitout.
If I said, Hey, what's thevolumeof a 100 dimensionalball?