http://www.livescience.com/forcesofnature/041025_greatest_equations.html


If the writers of equations had an Academy Awards or a Pullitzer 
Prize, the finalists might be Maxwell, Euler, Newton, Einstein, and 
whoever can take credit for ‘1+1=2.’

Robert Crease, a professor of philosophy at the State University of 
New York at Stony Brook, recently polled readers of Physics World to 
see what they thought was the greatest equation of all time.

There were 120 respondents, who nominated 50 different equations. Of 
these, 20 equations received more than two nominations.

The top two vote getters, each with about 20 percent of the vote, were 
Maxwell’s equations, which are four interwoven equations that describe 
the interplay between electricity and magnetism, and Euler’s equation, 
which combines rational, irrational and imaginary numbers to obtain 
zero.

While Euler’s equation is ethereal – finding use mostly in theoretical 
physics, Maxwell’s equations distill the essence of electromagnetism. 
Maxwell used them to calculate the speed of light and to predict the 
existence of invisible waves – an idea that was later proven correct 
by Heinrich Hertz in the case of radio waves.

Hertz once said of Maxwell’s equations, "One cannot escape the feeling 
that … they have an intelligence of their own, that they are wiser 
than we are, wiser even than their discoverers, that we get more out 
of them than was originally put into them."


Farther down the list were Newton’s Second Law (F=ma), Pythagoras’ 
theorem, Schroedinger’s equation, and Einstein’s calling card (E=mc2). 
Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, told the 
New York Times that he was disappointed that Einstein did not get more 
votes.

"I think the general physics community, they’re a little bored with 
the equation," Tyson said. "It’s risen to the level of icon that 
people no longer pay attention to."

But perhaps even more iconic is one of the simplest of all equations: 
‘1+1=2’ received about half a dozen votes. One of the respondents, 
Richard Harrison of Calgary, Alberta, called it "the fairy tale of 
mathematics."



xponent

1 - 1 = 0 Maru

rob


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