On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 7:27 AM, Sergio Rojas <sergi...@mail.com> wrote:

>
>
> Some issues to keep in mind:
>
> From the The Feynman Lectures on Physics:
>
>     http://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_52.html
> """
> Fig. 52–1(b)! The first molecule, the one that comes from the living
> thing, is called L-alanine. The other one, which is the same chemically,
> in that it has the same kinds of atoms and the same connections of the
> atoms, is a “right-hand” molecule, compared with the “left-hand”
> L-alanine, and it is called D-alanine.
> ...
> ...
> So it looks as though the phenomena of life permit a distinction between
> "right" and "left," ...
> """
>
>
​Yes, a very excellent suggestion and apropos in this context, Sergio.

The Feynman piece is fascinating.  I like that he features a "Martian" (see
below).

Congruent vs. Chiral:

I hang out on some math teacher web groups (mostly on Facebook) and one
topic that comes up a lot is "congruence".

Interestingly, the math concept of "congruence" teaches us to overlook or
ignore "chirality" or handedness in structures, despite these enantiomers
having completely different chemical properties.​

We would say the left hand is congruent to the right hand in a math class.

I downloaded the PDF of your book and am reading it.  Impressive!

Mixing math and programming and deriving the benefits of synergy has been
one of my themes as well.

Regarding coordinate systems, I'm probably the only teacher to use what I
call Quadrays in the classroom.  Indeed, next week I'll be sharing a summer
camp course in "Martian Math" with some Silicon Forest kids that features
this alternative coordinate system, with four basis rays from the center of
a regular tetrahedron to its four corners, using positive 4-tuples.

All points in space are linear combinations of these four basis vectors. I
have Python code for converting back and forth to XYZ.  The centers of
closest packed spheres in the CCP all have positive whole number
coordinates.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadray_coordinates
https://github.com/4dsolutions/Python5/blob/master/Generating%20the%20FCC.ipynb

I tell them this is what Martians use, acknowledging this is purely science
fiction, and suggest that comparing and contrasting a conventional
apparatus with something alien (unfamiliar) actually helps students achieve
a deeper understanding of the convention.

Martians also use triangles and tetrahedrons to model 2nd and 3rd powering
such that 3 x 3 x 3 is a tetrahedron of 27, not a cube of 27.

We have a constant for going back and forth between XYZ cubic volumes and
IVM tetra volumes.

http://www.4dsolutions.net/satacad/martianmath/toc.html  (from my previous
iteration of this class)



> Other Related links:
>    https://phys.org/news/2014-10-handedness-life.html
>    http://www.iflscience.com/space/why-life-left-handed-answer-stars/
>
>
​Yes very useful.  Looking for chemical signatures in space leads me to
Harold Kroto's discovery of C60 and its subsequent analysis and synthesis
as a topic.

https://youtu.be/yZ8JDDnyxC4  (another link re chirality)

Thanks again!

Kirby

​

> Sergio
> Check out the free first draft of the book:
>      Prealgebra via Python Programming
>      https://www.researchgate.net/publication/325473565
>      https://github.com/rojassergio/Prealgebra-via-Python-Programming
> _______________________________________________
>
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