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Selected Topics on the Rubik’s Cube. Ian Winokur Greenfield Community College winokuri@gcc.mass.edu. Picture from Math Horizons, November 2010. Outline. History of the cube The cube in pop culture Two solving methods Some demonstration solves Counting the number of possible scrambles
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Selected Topics on the Rubik’s Cube Ian Winokur Greenfield Community College winokuri@gcc.mass.edu Picture from Math Horizons, November 2010
Outline • History of the cube • The cube in pop culture • Two solving methods • Some demonstration solves • Counting the number of possible scrambles • Videos that look fake but aren’t
History of the Rubik’s Cube • Invented in 1974 by Erno Rubik, a Hungarian architect and professor. • The cube made its international debut in London, Paris, Nuremburg, and New York in 1980. • It’s popularity faded for a while but there has been a rebirth largely as a result of the internet.
They cube – so should you! • See this guy do a complete solve on youtube! (1:20)
Solution Methods • What’s an algorithm? • Basic commutator method: • Do something. We’ll call this A. • Then do something else. We’ll call this B. • Then undo the first something. This is A inverse. • Then undo the second something. This is B inverse. • Eg. Put on your socks, then put on your shoes,…
Solution Methods • Lots of good beginner methods out there – youtube Tyson Mao or google Jasmine Lee. • Fridrich Method – the overwhelming favorite amongst speedcubers. • CFOP – manyalgorithmsrequired(41 + 57 + 21) • A virtual example solve (or two) • Me live!
How many different states of the cube? • Virtual cube
Corners • Orient them: 3*3*3*3*3*3*3*3 • Permute them: 8*7*6*5*4*3*2*1 • Multiply everything above: 3^8 * 8!
Edges • Orient them: 2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2 • Permute them: 12*11*10*9*8*7*6*5*4*3*2*1 • Multiply everything above: 2^12 * 12!
Putting it all together • Multiply all of the corner numbers by all of the edge numbers: 3^8 * 8! * 2^12 * 12! • Lots of good math reasons to divide by 12 • 3^8 * 8! * 2^12 * 12! / 12 = …
Number of Rubik’s Cube Scrambles 43,252,003,274,489,856,000
How big is 43 quintillion? • Let’s calculate how many cubes it would take to cover the surface of the Earth: • The Rubik’s Cube measures 5.7 centimeters on a side so the area of one face is 5.7^2 or 32.49 square centimeters
How big is 43 quintillion? • Radius of Earth = 6378.1 kilometers • Convert this to centimeters by multiplying by 100,000: • Radius of Earth = 637,810,000 centimeters • Surface area of a sphere = • Surface area of Earth =
How big is 43 quintillion? • Summary: • The area of one face of the cube is • Surface area of Earth is • To find the number of cubes needed to cover the surface of the Earth, …
How big is 43 quintillion? • Number of cubes to cover the Earth: 157,261,558,849,369,000 • Number of different cube scrambles: 43,252,003,274,489,900,000 • To find how many Earths we can cover with all those cubes…
Single Solve World Record Progression • Erik Akkersdijk – 2008 (Netherlands) • Feliks Zemdegs – 2010 (Australia) • Feliks – later that same day • Feliks – 2010 • Feliks – 2011 • Feliks –2011 – slow motion • Feliks –2011
Facts about Feliks • Feliks Zemdegs – Australian speedcuber • 15 years old • Complete domination on the 3x3x3
Bigger Cubes and Other Twisty Puzzles • Cubes of size 2x2x2 through 7x7x7 are being mass produced and sold. • Google ‘Jaap’ for a nice site if you have a twisty puzzle you want to solve. • Feliks is the best or near the best in all of the cubes pictured!
Solving Variations • Craziness – Gabriel Alejandro Orozco Casillas (Mexico) • Multi-craziness – Chester Lian (Malaysia) • One-handed - Feliks • None-handed – Anssi Vanhala (Finland)
Questions? • This PowerPoint (with links) is available at http://www.fentonphysics.com/smashday/ Ian Winokur Greenfield Community College winokuri@gcc.mass.edu