(ML 17.2) Monte Carlo methods - A little history

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024

Комментарии • 18

  • @MrTatpong
    @MrTatpong 11 лет назад +1

    Thanks a lot. Fascinating history. It makes math alive.

  • @TheRach995
    @TheRach995 3 года назад +1

    You left out Martin J Berger when talking about the history, his work with Monte Carlo numbers was very important to the development of radiation therapy, as well as radiation shields to protect astronauts, and was helpful to the science of food sterilization and preservation. He was an amazing person who escaped the holocaust, never finished high school but became a physicist with what is now the National institute of standards and technology.

    • @TheRach995
      @TheRach995 3 года назад +1

      He’s also my grandpa and deserves more credit for his work, frankly.

    • @ahamed4152
      @ahamed4152 2 года назад

      wow. lucky you should be proud to come from good gene.

  • @rsberryalta
    @rsberryalta 7 лет назад +2

    Computers as we know them today did not exist in the 1944-46 period. Von Neumann and Ulam were actually using electro mechanical calculators. This approach was to slow to handle the calculations needed to design a hydrogen bomb, which motivated Von Neumann to build the first modern computer at the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton after the war. The Monte Carlo calculation was critical to understanding what was happening to electrons during an atomic blast. See "Turing's Cathedral " by George Dyson.

  • @chogo888
    @chogo888 13 лет назад

    thanks for that, Its always wonderful to get the history behind these methods

  • @sunnyhours84
    @sunnyhours84 8 лет назад +1

    Great video! Sorry, but I LMAO @ 4:18. Not over the two bombs detonating over Japan (of course), but over your reflection of the matter: "And so, that was very unfortunate."
    Anyway keep it up and please post more videos of math history! I can't get enough.

  • @yulecat
    @yulecat 11 лет назад +2

    Thank you!

  • @JorgeGamaliel
    @JorgeGamaliel 12 лет назад +1

    Very nice. thanks fot that, i like the rendering equation, ray tracing and to make renders, i don´t know many things but i want to learn. I know that Monte-Carlo Methods are often used in Computer Graphics. I have a lot of papers and i am trying to learn more.

  • @DavidWhelbourn
    @DavidWhelbourn 11 лет назад +1

    Thank you, very informative

  • @learning_with_irving4266
    @learning_with_irving4266 3 года назад

    Thank you
    for this

  • @yuxiangswjtu
    @yuxiangswjtu 8 лет назад

    thanks for the video!

  • @ahamed4152
    @ahamed4152 2 года назад

    the only downside is saying the bomb was bad. wrong. It ended WW2.

  • @mysteriouszed
    @mysteriouszed 3 года назад

    Hello guij

  • @hervediedie
    @hervediedie 3 года назад

    Guy the way you repeat some of your sentences is really boring !

  • @DehanDeCroos
    @DehanDeCroos 9 лет назад +9

    Oh my god man get to the effing point!!!!

    • @AssassinGrudge
      @AssassinGrudge 7 лет назад

      do you watch GTlive Streams ?

    • @adamzerner5208
      @adamzerner5208 7 лет назад +7

      "A little history" is in the title, so he is on topic. If you're not looking for "a little history", go to the next video.