Pizza physics (New York-style) - Colm Kelleher
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People love eating pizza, but every style of pie has a different consistency. If "New York-style" -- thin, flat, and large -- is your texture of choice, then you've probably eaten a slice that was as messy as it was delicious. Colm Kelleher outlines the scientific and mathematical properties that make folding a slice the long way the best alternative ... to wearing a bib.
Many of the ideas in curved-surface math (which is technically called “differential geometry”) first originated when people tried to draw accurate maps of the Earth’s surface. Maps are drawings of pieces of the surface of the Earth - which is approximately spherical - on flat pieces of paper. But we know that spheres and flat pieces of paper aren’t isometric, so you can’t transform one into the other without stretching. What consequences do you think this might have for the shapes of countries on a map of the world? It helps to visualize this problem if you carefully peel a mandarin orange, and then try to lay the strips down flat on a table.
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Meet The Creators
- Educator Colm Kelleher
- Artist Jason Forrest
- Animator Joel Moser
- Director Joel Trussell
- Narrator Colm Kelleher