Hey everyone,
Here's a rough cut for a new video, about a strange series of computations that compute pi...until they don't.
As always, comments and feedback are welcome. I still have yet to do a proper comb-through for little errors, and there are a number of animations I'll amend, so feel free to throw in any requested changes while I'm at it. At the very least I'll probably add a bit more about variations on this phenomenon that result in patterns that break much later.
This explanation lent itself to being broken up into two parts, this one giving the core intuition, and a second one diving into the more heavy machinery it leans on, namely the convolution theorem. I'm curious to hear how satisfying the explanation feels before the rest comes. Frustratingly incomplete? A pleasing view of the argument's shape without being bogged down in details? Is there anything you'd do differently?
Many thanks!
Grant
Paul Zagieboylo
2022-11-03 17:33:04 +0000 UTC3blue1brown
2022-11-03 16:51:43 +0000 UTC3blue1brown
2022-11-03 16:48:28 +0000 UTC3blue1brown
2022-11-03 16:44:43 +0000 UTCC.J. Smith
2022-11-03 16:13:53 +0000 UTCWilliam Smith
2022-11-03 15:20:29 +0000 UTCMBP
2022-11-03 04:38:30 +0000 UTCAkiva Weinberger
2022-11-03 03:50:03 +0000 UTCAkiva Weinberger
2022-11-03 03:45:51 +0000 UTCAkiva Weinberger
2022-11-03 03:37:44 +0000 UTCTom Loredo
2022-11-02 18:31:27 +0000 UTCC.J. Smith
2022-11-02 07:25:31 +0000 UTCDaksha Vaid-Kwinter
2022-11-02 05:21:06 +0000 UTC