Euler's Method scene in Hidden Figures

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @valleyoftheheart
    @valleyoftheheart 6 лет назад +7537

    Sheldon looks super salty for at least a third of this movie 😂

    • @sinwolfe4868
      @sinwolfe4868 5 лет назад +564

      I read somewhere that he didn’t like having to be apart of the movie and having to pretend to be racist for it or something like that.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 5 лет назад +200

      @@sinwolfe4868 I wonder if he liked the paycheck.

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 4 года назад +16

      @Black Ninja
      He's not racist...

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 4 года назад +15

      @Black Ninja
      We all know he's not... That "smart"

    • @zolixdf
      @zolixdf 4 года назад +64

      I called him Sheldon through the movie too!

  • @NotLegato
    @NotLegato 6 лет назад +7647

    "that's ancient"- haha, i don't think any scientist would ever say that. the pythagorean theorem is pretty old too...

    • @stephanieparadine7953
      @stephanieparadine7953 5 лет назад +102

      Yet, I have not used it to this day. I still don't understand why I was taught it in high school. Since, I've graduated all I've had to use is simple math, addition and subtraction that's it. I did not need any theorem to push out my daughter.

    • @prasanth_m7
      @prasanth_m7 5 лет назад +616

      @@stephanieparadine7953 because you are a normie.....iam a mechanical engineer and i use it very often in my field.

    • @stephanieparadine7953
      @stephanieparadine7953 5 лет назад +34

      @@prasanth_m7 hahaha thanks

    • @jamest2606
      @jamest2606 5 лет назад +140

      @@stephanieparadine7953 Every 2d shape can be cut into right triangles. They are very important for doing geometry, which normal people might want to do.

    • @stephanieparadine7953
      @stephanieparadine7953 5 лет назад +6

      @@jamest2606 thank you for taking the time to explain.

  • @djvanderbilt
    @djvanderbilt 7 лет назад +4070

    the limit does not exist!!

  • @coolcat5018
    @coolcat5018 7 лет назад +3056

    "Euler's Method? bUt ThATs aNcIeNT"

    • @imperialrecker7111
      @imperialrecker7111 4 года назад +114

      iF iT tHaTs aNcIeNT, wHy I aM I sTiLL LeArNinG iT iN sChOoL?

    • @soobinnguyen6461
      @soobinnguyen6461 3 года назад +22

      @@imperialrecker7111 lol! O.o you know that this happened in the 1960s right? The Euler's Method wasn't used alot around that time !

    • @enriquelazzarini380
      @enriquelazzarini380 3 года назад +7

      Inteligence is better than envy

    • @ekoi1995
      @ekoi1995 3 года назад +7

      @@soobinnguyen6461 people didn't know euler in the 1960's?

    • @blee1997
      @blee1997 3 года назад +1

      @@ekoi1995 or they were just stupid not to use it in this context

  • @tadious9415
    @tadious9415 7 лет назад +7679

    As a math person, the idea of anyone at that level of math or science dismissing something because Euler worked on it is ridiculous. Euler revamped the world of math in many ways and his formulas are the foundation of a ton of different things in lots of areas. That'd be like them saying well lets discount Newton's laws of motion because that's ancient. It's not wrong and it was discovered by a genius. Loved the movie as a whole though! Just as a math person that line was a bit odd lol.

    • @Nathan-yu7cu
      @Nathan-yu7cu 7 лет назад +30

      Tad Meissner That's what I though t

    • @tadious9415
      @tadious9415 7 лет назад +231

      Still being surprised that someone brings up Euler in high level mathematics is like being surprised someone used an adjective in an English essay, even in new mathematics you use what's been built on and most of that Euler has had something to do with.

    • @Nathan-yu7cu
      @Nathan-yu7cu 7 лет назад +64

      Yeah but that's like being surprised that an equation uses multiplication. It still makes no sense. Also what they say about "new math" makes no sense. It is more likely they were inventing new physics formulas. Not whole branches of math.

    • @Nathan-yu7cu
      @Nathan-yu7cu 7 лет назад +15

      They are both commonly used

    • @tadious9415
      @tadious9415 7 лет назад +67

      Yes that specific method isn't used every time. But he dismisses it as "that's ancient" if one thing Euler did is ancient so is pretty much everything else he did. And I can't think of a branch of mathematics where one of Euler's theorems or identities or Euler's something isn't an integral part of it. He's one of the most brilliant mathematicians to have ever lived and dismissing his stuff as ancient is pretty ridiculous, as I'm sure even before they were using Euler's ancient method they were probably using 12 of his other theorems and identities as it's unavoidable in high level math. I've been a math major for the past 4 years and I can't think of one math class I've had so far that hasn't featured a "what euler did in this area" day of class where the professor talks about how much euler did for this area usually with a history lesson on euler and some random euler trivia, and I transferred schools in the middle. My point is I'm pretty sure most of the math world loves Euler and dismissing his work is just not done lol.

  • @explorer47422
    @explorer47422 4 года назад +771

    'Huh, that's it'
    'Type it up'
    Damn, not even a thank you?

    • @annetteandhercrafts
      @annetteandhercrafts 4 года назад +45

      This is the comment I was hoping to find. Not even a thank you. NOT EVEN A THANK YOU! 😤

    • @dkbeard3810
      @dkbeard3810 3 года назад +11

      RIGHT!

    • @_lone_wolf_
      @_lone_wolf_ 3 года назад +28

      He don't like that she did it

    • @GORT70
      @GORT70 3 года назад +2

      I thought the same thing.

    • @SantiagoCanArt
      @SantiagoCanArt 3 года назад +15

      Yes they were very dismissive towards her loved that she kept a great attitude and didn't let it interfere with her work they didn't acknowledge her then but at least now she's being recognized 😉

  • @oscaralvarez9588
    @oscaralvarez9588 7 лет назад +2752

    I love when she do math is so pretty I feel like I wanted to work for nasa

    • @prodigypigeon5873
      @prodigypigeon5873 7 лет назад +31

      ..............Just wow.

    • @jamesmarkcabral3310
      @jamesmarkcabral3310 6 лет назад +8

      But you never in your life will . Never ever ... You won't even come close to it .

    • @thewriterofideas9354
      @thewriterofideas9354 6 лет назад +58

      If you focus your life on chasing a math degree and learning lots of methods in math you can achieve it!!!!

    • @superiorduck2105
      @superiorduck2105 6 лет назад +71

      JAMES MARK CABRAL Neither will you.

    • @Prod._By_Kyoto_Beatz
      @Prod._By_Kyoto_Beatz 5 лет назад

      Lord Of Truth Oh calm the hell down he’s just saying it’s hard to get there damn

  • @deltafunction0
    @deltafunction0 4 года назад +689

    At least the director made sure the actors pronounced Euler's name correctly.

    • @reelsoffortuneslotsplay4267
      @reelsoffortuneslotsplay4267 3 года назад +6

      Stimmt!!!

    • @simonepazsimon7219
      @simonepazsimon7219 3 года назад +12

      Wait that's how you really say it? I pronounce it You-ler's method

    • @spycemyster
      @spycemyster 3 года назад

      @@simonepazsimon7219 It's pronounced "Oiler"
      Here's a video about the pronunciations of a lot of famous mathematicians (and Physicists) names
      ruclips.net/video/4Xp4F1h0YZM/видео.html

    • @simonepazsimon7219
      @simonepazsimon7219 3 года назад +8

      @@spycemyster I'll stick to my You-ler's method to mess with know-it-alls hehehe

    • @Pandora234able
      @Pandora234able 3 года назад +17

      @@simonepazsimon7219 Sure are owning us.

  • @tortillajoe
    @tortillajoe 6 лет назад +960

    I remember back when I was in AP calculus. In the last month (after we had taken the AP test) we had nothing to do so we goofed around and watched movies. We watched hidden figures and I’ll never forget how everyone had the same simultaneous groan when she said “eulers method” because of how absolutely done we were with it. Good times.

    • @nathanhoang6365
      @nathanhoang6365 2 года назад +35

      I am in the same boat as you lmao, just finished the Calc BC exam and we all groaned a little when we finally recognized a math concept that was in the movie.

    • @christrotter3052
      @christrotter3052 Год назад +3

      😂😂😂😂

  • @gwenward2141
    @gwenward2141 5 лет назад +1353

    As a math major, I feel like I have to explain why I suspect nobody considered Euler's method at first. Euler's method is a form of numerical computing by approximating a complex formula by a combination of several simpler formulas. Basically, you draw several very tiny lines between the points and use that to approximately represent the function (it's actually more involved than that, but that would take longer to explain) The idea is that the smaller the distance between the points, the more exact your final answer will be. However, when you decrease the distance between the points, you increase the number of calculations you need to do. Nowadays, numerical methods like this are usually done with a computer, which will generate 1000 calculations before you finish getting your coffee, but back in the day this movie is set computers were brand new. All these calculations would have to be done by hand, and although that's what they hired "computers" for, the regular NASA scientists would have probably seen it a cumbersome, and may have forgotten about it years before.

    • @willrose5424
      @willrose5424 Год назад +2

      ​@Dustin Stich 🤣😁😁

    • @boraxsopanic2670
      @boraxsopanic2670 Год назад +8

      @@dustinstich6202 Ha ha. Funny because it's very very likely true. They knew a tremendous amount of dynamics. Most of the problem was making a rocket to do what is easily calculated. 😀

    • @72mossy
      @72mossy Год назад +21

      I couldn't even do long division or long multiplication. I was pure useless at maths, when I look at Catherine I'm gobsmacked at what she could do. My kids are good at Math.

    • @depressedphilosopherbitch7581
      @depressedphilosopherbitch7581 Год назад

      ​@@72mossy I'm bad too n I'm 16

    • @boraxsopanic2670
      @boraxsopanic2670 Год назад +2

      @@dustinstich6202 Are you majoring in Physics? You need at least some graduate classes and advanced mathematics.

  • @Just.A.T-Rex
    @Just.A.T-Rex 2 года назад +1808

    People just don’t realize how truly epic Euhler was. The sheer quantity of works that are still being published today and into tomorrow beyond is unbelievable.

    • @hongchulnam1630
      @hongchulnam1630 2 года назад +29

      Euler not euhler….

    • @ace9924
      @ace9924 Год назад +8

      ​@@hongchulnam1630 pronounced as Oiler

    • @WolfgangKaipz
      @WolfgangKaipz Год назад +6

      And he was blind for most of his work

    • @dennissilber287
      @dennissilber287 Год назад +30

      @@teddybearisms2505 Boy did you miss the point of the whole story. She was anything but ordinary regardless of her humility compelling her to say she was. She was a black woman in the American south in the 1960s who was instrumental in applying all the mathematical and astrophysics knowledge available at the time in order to figure out how to insert a human piloted space vehicle into orbit and have it return to Earth in a 20 square mile target as well as landing a manned spacecraft on the moon and returning to land on Earth in a defined target area. Anyone capable of doing this would not be ordinary let alone a black woman in that time and place.

    • @sleepyearth
      @sleepyearth Год назад +3

      @@teddybearisms2505 Every character in the movie is played up. Everyone is pretty average.
      By your logic they are there because of their race and gender too.
      Stop being so salty.

  • @jaycharleston2570
    @jaycharleston2570 7 лет назад +865

    If Cookie meets Sheldon

    • @OK-0366
      @OK-0366 5 лет назад +2

      Sheldon was in the movie

    • @OK-0366
      @OK-0366 5 лет назад +1

      @twistedblktrekie Oh

    • @nicolesalmon4583
      @nicolesalmon4583 5 лет назад +3

      Cookie's more brilliant than Sheldon.

    • @cleekmaker00
      @cleekmaker00 3 года назад +1

      More like Det. Carter vs. Dr. Cooper.

  • @Erin-Thor
    @Erin-Thor Год назад +254

    When I watched this I was amazed at the realization that all the math was done by hand, not one advanced computer was used. They successfully calculated and projected everything that brought humans from the earth to the moon and back. That’s pretty damn awesome. 😊

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Год назад

      They had mechanical calculators over a century ago (+ slide rules). By WW2 they had electromechanical ones. They also had lots of tables in book form. NASA also had computers (fairly advanced ones for the time). It definitely wasn’t by hand.
      In fact, the calculations used to drive the plot in this movie were done on a computer by a young white guy. You really shouldn’t trust the historical accuracy of movies :)

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor Год назад

      @@robertwatson818 😳

    • @SpotTheBorgCat
      @SpotTheBorgCat Год назад +28

      When they started integrating computers in the NASA program, the scientists would double check the accuracy of the computers by checking with the women portrayed in this movie!!

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor Год назад +3

      @@SpotTheBorgCat - Awesome! Thanks!

    • @tonymanero5544
      @tonymanero5544 11 месяцев назад +5

      And the job name of people who did those calculations was “Computer” like Writer, Editor, Janitor, etc.

  • @pcbacklash_3261
    @pcbacklash_3261 6 лет назад +1404

    I see a lot of comments here stating that Euhler's method is such a basic part of mathematics training that it should have been obvious to everyone in that room.
    Now, I never got beyond basic high school geometry (history was always my thing), so I don't know if that's true. But I DO know problem-solving, and if there's anything I've learned it's that people can be so laser-focused on certain methods and paradigms that they can overlook the most 'obvious' thing, even if it's right in front of their face.
    And I know enough about the early days of NASA to recognize that they were dealing with technology so cutting-edge that, often, they didn't even know what questions to ask, let alone find the answers. So their natural inclination would be to use the most modern methodologies available. In that frame of mind, I can understand how they could easily overlook some ancient method, however 'obvious' it may seem to an outside observer.
    Just my two cents...

    • @kundankumar777
      @kundankumar777 6 лет назад +61

      PCBacklash _ math doesn't work in timelines. It works in a hierarchy of principles. So you don't go about solving a problem in mathematics based on "current" or "ancient". So, whatever you know about problem solving, I am sorry to say your whole comment is crap.
      And I'm not one of those who thinks that the protagonist shouldn't have been credited this much. Just saying this scene was bs. Worse than bs. Any mathematician that likes this scene should give up on his life. That level of bs. Even big bang theory tv series does more authentic scenes than this.
      My two cents.

    • @myspaceuser
      @myspaceuser 5 лет назад +11

      @@kundankumar777
      Yeah ok

    • @kundankumar777
      @kundankumar777 5 лет назад +21

      @@myspaceuser haha...It was a comment from long time ago and now I am a bit embarrassed with my outrage shown here...sorry guys...I still hold the same view about the topic but would word it differently next time. Outrage not justified

    • @tactical1013
      @tactical1013 5 лет назад +16

      It's like saying we didn't think 1+1= 2 because the math is ancient. It doesn't make any sense.

    • @johndesilva8220
      @johndesilva8220 5 лет назад +3

      Have you at least learned to wait a little bit or re read over your relies before sending to make sure the tone is appropriate? 😙😅

  • @Eleni_E
    @Eleni_E 5 лет назад +221

    We’re literally learning Euler’s Method this week in DiffEq. It’s a class most STEM majors take immediately following the calculus sequence. Euler is the freaking rock star of the math department (he’s got multiple fanboys, it’s great). Seeing the stuff I’m groaning over in my 8am presented so dramatically made me laugh hard enough I think I may have cracked a rib.

    • @mycroft16
      @mycroft16 Год назад +1

      Man I hated DiffEq when I took it for my astrophysics major. You get used to it if you're willing to accept right off the bat that it works amd you probably aren't going to really intuitively understand how or why for a while. Lol. Extremely powerful branch of math.

    • @egeerdem8272
      @egeerdem8272 Год назад

      They love overdramatizing shit. Non-stem people watch this crap and think its real

    • @hankeng6375
      @hankeng6375 Год назад +3

      one of my friend's last names is Euler; I asked her if she prefers "yoo"-ler or "oil"-ler. She says the only ones that call her "oil"-ler are those that know higher math.

    • @trbz_8745
      @trbz_8745 4 месяца назад

      Y'all didn't learn Euler's Method until *Diff Eq* ?? That's like Calc 1 stuff! The math department did you dirty

  • @MoonIceDream
    @MoonIceDream 3 года назад +164

    my math teacher: "we're going to watch a movie about math!"
    everyone: UGHHHHHHHH
    me: *just excited because the movie is also about space*

    • @doodleboi7034
      @doodleboi7034 3 года назад +6

      Yes I will watch anything about space,even if I hate the subject. I just wanna have movies which has details.

    • @gably2491
      @gably2491 3 года назад +4

      My Math teacher put this movie yesterday and today we didn’t finish it all we where very close to tho and I loved the movie it was so good

    • @frankyflowers
      @frankyflowers 3 года назад +2

      lazy teacher.

    • @markfox1545
      @markfox1545 3 года назад +4

      I don't think a maths teacher should be showing films in class. Shouldn't some, ooh, I don't know, MATHS teaching be done?!

    • @dcamron46
      @dcamron46 2 года назад +1

      What grade and what state is this in the USA? Is it a public school? Why the hell are they watching this hollywood crap when there’s so much ACTUAL stuff to learn

  • @Vika794
    @Vika794 11 месяцев назад +42

    "Math is always dependable."
    "For YOU it is."
    😂😂

  • @haileyvillasenor1508
    @haileyvillasenor1508 6 лет назад +616

    My brain hurts just watching this. It's too much math.

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 6 лет назад +25

      Then you are condemned to accepting what they tell you as true. Math is the language of the universe.

    • @gegasmeef7850
      @gegasmeef7850 6 лет назад +9

      ...and not enough meth

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 6 лет назад +14

      ...and not enough math, either. This is a screen writer's idea about how to snow the non-engineers in the audience, and not have to bone up on the math himself to make it completely realistic. It's close enough to sound right, it rings bells in a an engineer's head, but its not quite real. The problems not in the shape of the orbit (that is, whether the orbit is open or closed) but rather in how to get a numeric solution from a problem without a closed -form math solution. You go back to numeric approximations (such as Euler's integration algorithm), which require a lot of number crunching. Guess what changed to make that a possibility.

    • @PLF...
      @PLF... 5 лет назад

      #murica

    • @fvn55yearsago57
      @fvn55yearsago57 5 лет назад

      Hailey Villasenor
      x = -b plus or minus the square root of b squared minus 4ac over 2a.

  • @jacobhill9769
    @jacobhill9769 6 лет назад +301

    Just took my test in Differential Equations over Euler’s method. Surprisingly the easiest part of the test..

  • @antwanalex4147
    @antwanalex4147 4 года назад +80

    Why the hell Taraji P. Henson didn't win an Oscar for her performance on Hidden Figures?

    • @robfiedler2139
      @robfiedler2139 3 года назад +15

      And the movie should have won best picture.

    • @mikaku
      @mikaku 3 года назад +2

      Because while she did a great acting job, Viola Davies did a better job in Fences. And thank to that Oscar, she became the first African-American to win the "Triple Crown of Acting" (that is winning an Oscar, an Emmy and a Tony award).

    • @mikaku
      @mikaku 3 года назад +2

      @@robfiedler2139 a year with Fences, Hacksaw Ridge and Moonlight also nominated. While Hidden Figures was good, those 3 movies were better.

    • @auandaily
      @auandaily 3 года назад +1

      @@mikaku Can someone tell her to at least try recording a spoken album for once? I'm sure the Grammys will consider her with open arms like Michelle Obama.

  • @TwilightPrincess0930
    @TwilightPrincess0930 7 лет назад +460

    The amount of negativity in this comment section is just sad. There are some normal comments but the majority are just people calling the movie propaganda because they can't handle education. It's okay to point out that the equation seems to be nothing and dismissing Euler's Method is silly, but saying that Katherine got more credit than she deserved is stupid.

    • @cynthiaweller7148
      @cynthiaweller7148 7 лет назад +29

      Abhimanyu Sinha I agree. Perhaps the vast majority of people commenting about her getting more credit that she deserved fail to realize that the movie is based on historical fact and the real life accounts of Katherine and everyone working at NASA during that time. She got the credit because that’s where it was due!

    • @bloodbabe.2226
      @bloodbabe.2226 7 лет назад +28

      DFS43 How is problack a problem? People like you make me question why didn't you get swallowed. Problack is actually good because it's getting more recognized 90s-2014 most black people hated being black due to European beauty standards. Now they're more natural and open to their culture. What's prowhite doing? Sharing their "culture" that they don't have? ITS A MOVIE! I can name over exaggerated movies about white people if that's your issue.

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +5

      Dummy, people are calling it propaganda BECAUSE IT IS PROPAGANDA. Research the subject matter for yourself.

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +6

      Wrong. The screenwriters took a lot of liberty with the truth. This scene is pure fiction, or perhaps you could provide a reference that supports the authenticity of this. Good luck, because it doesn't exist.

    • @hillsane9262
      @hillsane9262 6 лет назад +10

      Charles Black the imitation game is quite a joke in terms of historical accuracy. Yet it won awards and was acclaimed. I remember people also criticizing Selma for inaccuracies, I just thought it wasn't a very good movie, but not because of the inaccuracies yet never mentioning how inaccurate the celebrated imitation game was. I'm sure you are just as critical of other movies that reference historical events and people and criticize their inaccuracies because guess what, most of it is not accurate. Maybe you have a particular Obsession do tooth the who is supposedly it accurate in this movie.

  • @robertmorris8997
    @robertmorris8997 Год назад +34

    My Dad taught himself Calculus so he could be a machinist. Since it wasn't a subject in his dinky high school, and he got drafted into the Army, he must have done it in his spare time in the Army. After that he got a job as a boring mill operator for Vought. He worked on probably every aviation and space program there was for 30 years. He was laid off for a couple years, so he worked at Lockheed in the Skunkworks.
    I remember once when I was a kid, we had a class project to report what our parents did. I asked Mom, "Directory assistance supervisor for Southwestern Bell.
    I asked Dad, "I make potato chips." Many years later he said he told me that because it was classified at the time. Probably the Regulus missile.
    And he LOVED messing with everybody in a myriad of creative ways. THE original funny bone.

  • @vjreimedia
    @vjreimedia Год назад +82

    As a kid I was really bad at math, teachers always paid attention to the kids who got it faster. My mom hired a lady to teach me, it was like learning German explained by a Mandarin speaker. Until for some reason everything made sense. There was something I was not getting it until I got it. In my school they rate the grades from 01 to 20 where you have to get a 10 to pass as a minimum, 9 is failed. And they do 3 tests. On the first one I got 03, on the second one 09. I was about to lose the year but on the last test I got 19. The next semester I got 17, 20 and 19, the best grade. Math is such a joy.

    • @michmirich
      @michmirich Год назад +2

      I was like that in chemistry. I didnt get it until suddenly I did. It was entirely the teachers fault. It was beginning chemistry but only 5 people passed the final.

    • @vjreimedia
      @vjreimedia Год назад +3

      @@michmirich I have two nieces, they are twins. One get the class just fine, the other one does not get it and cried a lot frustrated. I noticed she just gets distracted and does not know how to pay attention. I told her mom when doing homework place one in the kitchen and the other one in the living room because she gets distracted/ frustrated by seeing the other one just doing it. In no time she just started to feel more relaxed about homework. Now she is doing just fine. People just learn differently.

    • @valevisa8429
      @valevisa8429 Год назад

      My question is,why do you need from 1 to 20 to grade a student ?!!!

    • @michmirich
      @michmirich Год назад +1

      @@vjreimedia Absolutely! but its a teachers job to make sure most if not all of their students are understanding the subject matter. In a class of more than 20, at least 15 should have received a passing grade.

    • @vjreimedia
      @vjreimedia Год назад

      @@michmirich All students are paying the same. Use your brain, loser.

  • @angl4372
    @angl4372 11 месяцев назад +30

    Love the stunned reaction by Jim Parsons. You can tell from his expression he's realised that Katherine is a level above him.

  • @Lexingtonian
    @Lexingtonian 7 лет назад +270

    Remember, "Based on a True Story"

    • @nico114334
      @nico114334 7 лет назад +32

      Monster Hesh it is .Karen Johnson is still alive & got awarded by NASA a few months ago .

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +35

      Perhaps, but scenes like this are clearly exaggerations if not outright fiction.

    • @jb-dg8ss
      @jb-dg8ss 6 лет назад +16

      "based" meaning they could change anything they want in the story. The movie 300 is based on a true story haha

    • @callmeyourdai5y518
      @callmeyourdai5y518 5 лет назад +28

      @@Chasstful "Katherine’s specialty was calculating the trajectories for space shots which determined the timing for launches. “I’d ask (another section at NASA), ‘Where do you want (the astronauts) to come down?’ And they’d tell me the spot and I’d work backward from there.” An early achievement was correctly computing the ‘launch window’ for astronaut Alan Shepard’s Mercury mission. His successful splashdown at sea on May 5, 1961 marked the return of the first American in space.
      As the work grew more complex, Katherine was tasked with calculations to propel space capsules into orbit around the moon and to send landing units to and from the lunar surface. She also earned kudos for plotting backup navigational charts that would enable astronauts to guide their ships by the stars in case of electronic failures. In 1962 computers were used for the first time to calculate John Glenn’s history making orbit around Earth. But, according to Katherine, NASA officials called on her to verify the numbers. “They knew I had done most of the [the calculations], so they let me do it,” she said."

    • @tiana1017
      @tiana1017 5 лет назад +10

      no lies about KATERINE THOUGH, THAT IS TRUE, SHE WAS A GENIUS AND NOBODY CAN DENY THAT ONLY HATERS WHO ARE LOSERS WILL TRY LOL

  • @isabelleshi6669
    @isabelleshi6669 7 лет назад +138

    Sigh. I wish I were as good as math as she was.

    • @JR-iu8yl
      @JR-iu8yl 6 лет назад +8

      then just fucking study

    • @rigira
      @rigira 5 лет назад

      Jay A Indians*

    • @NO-1-U-NO
      @NO-1-U-NO 5 лет назад +1

      Isabelle Shi 🙂👍 You can. Read, Understand, and Practice.

    • @tiana1017
      @tiana1017 5 лет назад +9

      MORE TO IT THEN JUST STUDY U IDIOT, SHE WAS A GENIUS

    • @JR-iu8yl
      @JR-iu8yl 4 года назад +1

      @@tiana1017 If you're using the word genius to make excuses for pathetic existence then go right ahead

  • @ona907
    @ona907 7 лет назад +259

    Katherine Johnson is a powerhouse, I aspire to have the talent she has

    • @julesharrison4488
      @julesharrison4488 4 года назад +4

      RIP

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +5

      This is fake as hell. This scene legit never happened.

    • @popsicIes
      @popsicIes 2 года назад +6

      @@DontDrinkthatstuff Damn, were you the coffee maker watching everything?

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +3

      @@popsicIes Nah it just didn't happen.

    • @jkane764
      @jkane764 2 года назад +7

      @@DontDrinkthatstuff "This is fake as hell. This scene legit never happened." - LOL - I take it you were there

  • @angienatoyn
    @angienatoyn 7 лет назад +56

    Google searches for Euler's method went up after this movie.

  • @erzan
    @erzan 5 лет назад +48

    Watching films like this makes me fall in love with Science and Maths, daydreaming of me applying to ESA (European Space Agency). Then I remember - I got a low C grade in Maths. Nevermind! 😂

  • @pikapuff123
    @pikapuff123 7 лет назад +355

    As a Math PhD student it's kinda hard to watch these actors pretend to know about math. Literally nobody in these people's position should be unaware of Euler's method. It's kinda do-it-in-your-sleep level material for someone who works in dynamical systems...

    • @pikapuff123
      @pikapuff123 7 лет назад +52

      There is a plurality of black students in my PhD program whose mathematical prowess would suggest otherwise, scumbag.

    • @pikapuff123
      @pikapuff123 7 лет назад +46

      So...do you know what Euler's Method is?

    • @crackuhsnackuh
      @crackuhsnackuh 7 лет назад +7

      Michael Lavigne Any tips to help me get better at algebra?

    • @nico114334
      @nico114334 7 лет назад +45

      Michael Lavigne its a movie ... But the lady Katherine Johnson is still alive & got awarded for her work for NASA she was a big math nerd ..

    • @koenkeep
      @koenkeep 6 лет назад +7

      I'm sure that scriptwriters will say that your thesis is so poorly written because it cannot be understood.

  • @BeeDenver
    @BeeDenver 4 года назад +5

    RIP Katherine Johnson. Hero of the world

  • @malia8819
    @malia8819 4 года назад +27

    I just finished Calc II and holy shit... people who do Euler’s method for fun have my full respect.

    • @egeerdem8272
      @egeerdem8272 Год назад +1

      why lol, its a really easy formula to use

    • @TangomanX2008
      @TangomanX2008 11 месяцев назад

      wait till you get to calculus iii. If it was taught in the same way back when I was a student, its what you learned in i and ii but in 3D and 4D (if you consider density a dimension).

  • @Moacat96
    @Moacat96 4 года назад +81

    Imagine how much more brilliant these women would have been if they had the corresponding privilege...

    • @Xxrocknrollgod
      @Xxrocknrollgod 3 года назад +1

      It’s a movie.

    • @Moacat96
      @Moacat96 3 года назад +3

      Based on real life

    • @benhauer5292
      @benhauer5292 3 года назад +1

      I agree but a lot of the time it’s the Suppression and the hard ship people suffer that help push them to be as great as they are. If they had the equality that any human deserves then they might not have worked as hard to become the brilliant minds they were. But regardless no one should ever be or ever have been treated they way they were :(

    • @johnblackhead2384
      @johnblackhead2384 3 года назад +2

      Imagine how much more peaceful we would all be without the constant whining and blaming of cultural Marxism. Sit down.

  • @lucyevans9530
    @lucyevans9530 6 лет назад +139

    Everyone in this comment section is freaking out about the maths. Its a movie. A movie aimed at giving the women on which this is a based the recognition they deserve while talking about and breaking down the racial barriers they faced. Not about math.

    • @xqueenn5012
      @xqueenn5012 5 лет назад +1

      It just doesn’t add up

    • @blumedechaos7001
      @blumedechaos7001 5 лет назад +3

      Xqueen that doesn’t matter lol.

    • @plox500
      @plox500 5 лет назад +8

      Fairly certain that it's Literally a movie about maths

  • @shivamrpatelofficial
    @shivamrpatelofficial 2 года назад +38

    Man this shit hits different when you are a Senior in Aerospace Engineering. I use Euler's angles a lot when we do matrix rotations.

    • @lucasbrown7317
      @lucasbrown7317 Год назад

      Tell me about it brother

    • @JohnH0130
      @JohnH0130 Год назад +2

      I don't think Euler's angles have anything to do with Euler's method for approximating the solution to a system of first order DEs [Differential Equatinons.}

    • @maestrono.7746
      @maestrono.7746 Год назад

      I thought you would use the dot matrix system instead?

  • @kootybear
    @kootybear Год назад +16

    This is such a great movie. So many great actors and actresses. Love it.

  • @HPHSGermany2010
    @HPHSGermany2010 7 лет назад +322

    My favorite scene in the film! I know there are some complaints about the scene being "too simplistic," mathematically, but film isn't about math. It's about image, story, sound, and emotion. I love this scene because it dramatizes the concept that multiple minds approaching the same problem with multiple perspectives work where a collection of homogeneous minds trip each other up.
    Thanks for posting this scene! I was hoping to find this...I'm going to use it in class when we talk about diversity and advantages of diverse working groups.

    • @franklucas4736
      @franklucas4736 6 лет назад +8

      You remind me of the CEO's of Apple who fired their African American Diversity Manager, for suggesting that Diversity applies to Diversity of Ideas, not just Race/Gender lol. The irony...

    • @hillsane9262
      @hillsane9262 6 лет назад +2

      frank lucas This scene depicts both. So I'm not sure what your complaint is about unless you are sure that he is relying on the diversity of personhood only. However diversity it's often shunned. Albeit coming from the wrong person ,perspective, or its newness.
      Look at what happened with the Challenger when groupthink took over.

    • @tchristian6080
      @tchristian6080 5 лет назад

      Kael Moffat has hustle

    • @briannab4037
      @briannab4037 4 года назад +6

      @@franklucas4736 That says a lot more about you than about OP.

    • @captainkielbasa5471
      @captainkielbasa5471 3 года назад +1

      That's not how math works.

  • @blah7983
    @blah7983 6 лет назад +15

    Addition is ancient as well though.

  • @nellAx19
    @nellAx19 Год назад +7

    As an engineer, I find it funny that at 1:10 includes what looks like "The Runge Kutta method" on the right page, which was always a go to over Euler's method for its faster convergence on a more exact answer. I'm not a historian, nor do I want to dig through a NASA historical database, but I wouldn't be surprised if other numerical methods like this were used over Euler's. I would think the movie needed something simple enough for the audience to understand. Easier to use Euler's instead of "fourth order Runge-Kutta".
    Also, no scientist would be saying "That's ancient" regarding a mathematical principle/method. Pythagorean Theorem is "ancient", but it still gets the job done. Still, fantastic movie.

    • @dragomiruzelac2227
      @dragomiruzelac2227 Год назад +4

      My late wife, who was a brilliant mathematician, would totally agree with that. My present wife, who is a fine physicist, would probably say the same but I have to ask her first.

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 Год назад

      You are correct. The scientists and engineers working on the project were neither as ignorant nor as racist as presented. Katherine developed novel approaches, which is why after the human computing team was disbanded, she was kept on with the project and why she got her name on papers.

    • @rakgadim.mohlala1324
      @rakgadim.mohlala1324 2 месяца назад +1

      @@dragomiruzelac2227you know how to pick em

  • @TheRedmondEthan
    @TheRedmondEthan 6 лет назад +10

    I know this scene was supposed to be like grandiose and inspiring but it just feels so fake and sloppy with them just saying all this about an "old method"

    • @vadapallichaitu8799
      @vadapallichaitu8799 3 года назад +1

      Yup no one ever says this is ancient we can't use it. If it works then it works

  • @hellcat1988
    @hellcat1988 7 лет назад +31

    I shudder to think how often in the past great minds like these were manipulated and used for the benefit of all mankind (or possibly just a few) without any recognition or reward. Who could even imagine where the world would be today without segregation, racism, and religion?

    • @thesilversage1
      @thesilversage1 5 лет назад +1

      John Lennon did.

    • @rishabbomma9361
      @rishabbomma9361 4 года назад +1

      probably the same

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 Год назад

      Name one male engineer or mathematician working in her department. Where is there recognition or reward?
      Did you know that the names of all the real-world men working with these ladies was changed so that their families would not sue the studios for wrongful defamation of character?
      Katherine never suffered any of the things portrayed in this movie. She records that her co-workers were always gracious to her. Far from not wanting to share a coffee pot with her, she was invited to eat lunch with them on the first day. She never once used the "colored bathroom", and only once was questioned about it - by a woman. The engineers she worked with didn't care.
      There was no smashing down the "Whites Only" sign. Federal facilities had been racially integrated back in the 1940s.
      The whole movie is an exercise in deliberate deception intend to make you shudder and make you angry.
      If the world would be today without racism, it would also be without this movie.

  • @deanvance4167
    @deanvance4167 7 лет назад +119

    Why'd they get Sheldon? Wouldn't Wolowitz be a better fit?

    • @LaserCrusader
      @LaserCrusader 7 лет назад +14

      Dean Vance
      Did he audition for the role?

    • @deanvance4167
      @deanvance4167 7 лет назад +1

      LaserCrusader Wolowitz is an engineer

    • @10GGundam
      @10GGundam 7 лет назад +9

      I can't handle this stupidity.

    • @SeeSeeSound
      @SeeSeeSound 7 лет назад +5

      No it should've been raj since he's the astrophysicist

    • @SeeSeeSound
      @SeeSeeSound 7 лет назад

      Karl - true

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 Год назад +12

    I remember learning and using Euler's Method and Newton's Method in my math elective programming class where we were only allowed to create programs for finding values of complex functions using simple operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, exponents. These Method didn't provide the "exact" solution, but the numerical approximation was close enough for all intents and purposes, and given any error range, I could easily calculate how many iterations of the algorithm were necessary to be within the desired error. Like Pythagoras' Theorem, it may be old but it works.

  • @roninelenion4805
    @roninelenion4805 7 лет назад +119

    One of the best movies of our time. No doubt about it.

  • @bassandbucks4282
    @bassandbucks4282 3 года назад +7

    Funny how Jim parsons character in the big bang theory (sheldon) is always making fun of engineers but in this movie he plays an engineer 😂

  • @freeman4871
    @freeman4871 Год назад +2

    This is what they call "cringe".

  • @ilmaio
    @ilmaio Год назад +3

    Euler? It's ancient.
    Like not wanting to play Mozart because ancient.
    Such bad writing, set to please the sort of audience thinking math is used to count pizza slices.
    All they have in mind is to show black wahman smart, white patriarch dumb.
    At this level - rocket science level - there is just respect no skin colors.
    Woke rethoric just ruins movies, as this one, that was not even bad (and could have been better without stale ideology).
    Euler? But it's ancient, is something a completely ignorant person could say, not somebody working at NASA. Euler literally MADE half the math we use today.
    We still use Pitagoras, 500 years BC. It's not that math grows old like tattoo fashion, common algebra techniques still used today were created around 1100 AD by the arabians, and were based on classic greek texts. So what?

  • @savannahscott90
    @savannahscott90 2 года назад +1

    For anyone who’s feeling down:
    Romans 8:18 “The pain you’ve been feeling can’t compare to the joy that is coming!” John 3:16 “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.” Whatever is going on right now, have faith, your situation will get better. :) Jesus bless anyone reading this and have a great day!!🥰✨💖

  • @drgilbertourroz
    @drgilbertourroz 4 года назад +10

    Euler’s method is a first-order scheme for solving first-order ordinary differential equations (ODEs) numerically, i,.e, solve dy/dx = f(x,y) subject to y(xo) = yo. It is indeed ancient, after all, Euler lived in the 1700’s, but his method lives on because it can be easily implemented, even by hand and a slide rule (as they most likely did in the period this movie shows). Nowadays, Euler’s method is used mostly to illustrate what not to do in the numerical solution of ODEs as it is the worst method in terms of the numerical error introduced. Runge-Kutta methods of the 4th and 5th order are preferred for their accuracy.

    • @PrincipalScratcher1
      @PrincipalScratcher1 Год назад +1

      And your point is what?

    • @mycroft16
      @mycroft16 Год назад

      It's hilarious that he called it ancient. We still use things in math far older than Euler. Thousands of years old. If it works age doesn't matter.

  • @PackerBronco
    @PackerBronco 2 года назад +1

    Remember this generation of scientists grew up with, and were probably still using, slide rules to do calculations and approximations. The idea that they would not be fully conversant with Euler's method is ridiculous.

  • @hikariharaga2339
    @hikariharaga2339 5 лет назад +6

    Sheldon looks normal here it feels weird

  • @siege2218
    @siege2218 3 года назад +7

    "Read Euler, read Euler. He is the master of us all" - Pierre Simon de Laplace

  • @Absaalookemensch
    @Absaalookemensch 5 лет назад +6

    0:49 When they realize they aren't even in the same league as her.

  • @sallyhanley9094
    @sallyhanley9094 5 лет назад +17

    It is a wonderful movie. I couldn’t do the math ever. But i love the story and the actors did a great job!!!

  • @zephyrus001
    @zephyrus001 Год назад +3

    Yeah, the movie really fell on its face for me at this point. Anyone with some domain specific knowledge is going to have an awfully hard time suspending disbelief. This would be like if the movie wanted us to believe she discovered nails or the wheel. It's painfully oblivious the movie is craning way too hard to give it's black, female protagonist a heroic moment by having her mathsplain. Pure Hollywood all the way. Then again, this sort of thing that has been done for protagonists of all ilks for all of movie history so yay for inclusion I guess.

  • @barbarosasmth2104
    @barbarosasmth2104 3 года назад +1

    It's funny howmuch they embellished this story.

  • @unclaimedchild5213
    @unclaimedchild5213 5 лет назад +6

    FINALLY. THAT'S WHAT THE NAME WAS. HIDDEN FIGURES. I WAS TRYING TO REMEMBER IT THIS WHOLE DAY THANK YOU

  • @ASRIBEIRIO
    @ASRIBEIRIO 7 лет назад +132

    Uh, what? Euler's Method is taught in every basic sophomore year differential equations course. It's a flagship technique that literally everyone that works in the physics or mathematics or engineering knows about. Why would this seem so brilliant? In reality, the mathematics used by Johnson for this task was undoubtedly far more complex.

    • @lizzyholloway5980
      @lizzyholloway5980 7 лет назад +101

      Katherine Johnson was a computer at NASA in the 50's. A time where most Engineers were taught Engineering by professors with the knowledge equivalent to that of a High School Teacher, in a time when Google didn't exist, and there were no set parameters for these situations. It is highly likely that thanks to Mrs. Johnson Euler's Method was brought back into standardized use. Homer Hickem who like Mrs. Johnson, was lightyears ahead of his time, had to teach himself Telemetry, by way of a Calculus book even Ivy League Universities weren't yet using.

    • @samuelcoughlin9165
      @samuelcoughlin9165 7 лет назад +37

      ASRIBEIRIO Everyone today. Back then, science and math were subjects for rich college people. They weren't taught in high schools, at least not at this level.

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +9

      This shit never happened, this is "based" on actual events, meaning its pure fiction, Do you really think this woman was a better mathematician than a room full of MIT engineers? This film is pc PROPAGANDA

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +4

      This episode never happened, or at least there is no record of it happening, the screenwriters took a ton of liberty with truth I believe. These days in Hollywood, the term "based on" actual events means fiction. This film was just PC propaganda, sorry to burst your bubble.

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful 7 лет назад +4

      Exactly, this is why this film is so absurdly unbelievable.

  • @marysmith-ps7uj
    @marysmith-ps7uj Год назад +37

    This woman was phenomenal in real life. This is the kind of history certain people don't want our kids to know. This is the history all people in the country should be proud to know, to see how we as a nation could thrive.❤

    • @recalcitrantprophet9573
      @recalcitrantprophet9573 Год назад

      "There is no idea so silly, a woman won't allow another woman to convince her of it, if only to preserve social cohesion, especially the idea of social cohesion." ~ Someone tired of women being able to read, for reading is the root of the pornography women prefer.

    • @basedlawyer5147
      @basedlawyer5147 Год назад +4

      She was pretty smart but this is all fictionalized and she wasn’t at the forefront of anything. She was a math janitor who looked out for typos and other mistakes. No one is hiding this history. She just wasn’t that important. Sorry but that’s the truth.

    • @egm2901
      @egm2901 11 месяцев назад +1

      So, did you apply the same exacting standards to the Apollo 13 movie? Or was all of that movie exact to the letter with no dramatization involved?

    • @basedlawyer5147
      @basedlawyer5147 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@egm2901 I’ve never seen Apollo 13 but that’s not the same thing. Apollo 13 is about astronauts who went to space and ran into problems. That actually happened. The actors were white and so were the astronauts. What’s your point?

    • @lancer525
      @lancer525 11 месяцев назад

      @@basedlawyer5147 Tell us you're a bigoted racist without actually saying you're a bigoted racist. I really feel sorry for anyone who ever has the misfortune of being your client.

  • @deandignos1469
    @deandignos1469 6 лет назад +5

    Sheldon why are you there
    You're supposed to be solving string theory

  • @anthonykristoffersonalonzo658
    @anthonykristoffersonalonzo658 Год назад +3

    Genius is not knowing everything but using what you know to make everything.

  • @bloxrocks5179
    @bloxrocks5179 Год назад +5

    Euler pretty much always shows up in math. Doesn't matter what kind of math he always shows up eventually

  • @julesharrison4488
    @julesharrison4488 4 года назад +4

    RIP Katherine Johnson

  • @ericfermin8347
    @ericfermin8347 4 года назад +1

    e^i(pi)=-1 Most beautiful equation ever written. Euler's method....meh it's okay, good enough for government work.

  • @puncheex2
    @puncheex2 6 лет назад +13

    The problem in this scene is not in the dialog but on the chalkboard. Euler's method is, as she says, a method for numerical integration. What she is saying (in an abstract sense is that analytical, closed form methods don't exist for the integration she needs to do. Before computers, this was a problem, for, while numerical solutions existed, they were painful and expensive (in man-hours) to pursue. With the advent of computers (as she is illustrating in this scene), suddenly the old ways (well, some were old) suddenly got a new lease on life. It is a great idea only a comp sci geek would have thought of. Orbital mechanics is full of calculus; Newton had to invent Calculus (one branch of it, anyway) to prove his theory of Gravity explained Kepler's laws of planetary motion.
    The problem is that the chalkboards don't contain a single integration sign (it is a tall stretch-S thing with numbers at the top and bottom, followed by a math expression and usually with a "dx" following - there's one on the first page she opens to in the book) on them. The second page opened in the book contains differential equations in a derivation of the method, but on the next page you can see where the next section after Euler's method is the Runge-Kutta method, an improvement on Euler's.
    Euler's method will give you bupkis unless used on an integration problem. They throw a few radicals and lots of numbers, an occasional pi and trig function, a few Greek letters and other essentially meaningless stuff, most of which is amenable to immediate reduction with slip-sticking (are there actually any slide rules in the film? Every engineer had one, or several, until HP obsoleted them in about 1976; my well-worn collection sits on a shelf in my bedroom), and the producers expect it to be enough. Any sophomore physics or engineering student could have done a better job at decorating the boards.

    • @JohnH0130
      @JohnH0130 Год назад +1

      Euler's method IS specifically applicable to systems of first order differential equations.
      Such equations involve a rate, for example speed, or [distance travelled] /]time], often expressed as [dx/dt].
      For a body in orbit, dx/dt would be a function of such things as:
      gravitational acceleration, of not just the earth but also other nearly celestial bodies.
      other acceleration, such as rocket thrust
      atmospheric drag
      weight, which may need to be continually recalculated due to fuel consumption
      None of these would normally be described using a integral formula.
      Now it may be that Euler's method can be used to numerically solve problems for which the applicable formulas do include integrals. But that does not in turn imply that an integral is a necessary ingredient of an Euler method application.

  • @tessamoland797
    @tessamoland797 11 месяцев назад +1

    Sistah girl had to figure it out AND type it up for them!

  • @Neighbour_Al
    @Neighbour_Al 3 года назад +47

    I get a tear when I see moments like this. I have such a deep appreciation and respect for people like this. I've forgotten so much EXCEPT the sense of beauty in people that are so damn intelligent.

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +7

      This scene is 100% fake my man. This never happened.

    • @torta0026
      @torta0026 2 года назад +2

      @@DontDrinkthatstuff how would u know

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +2

      @@torta0026 Because I know. Get your knowledge up.

    • @mrjonsey
      @mrjonsey Год назад +2

      @@DontDrinkthatstuff whether this exact scene happened or not is irrelevant, Katherine solved the problem.

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff Год назад +4

      @@mrjonsey "Truth doesn't matter to me, this is propaganda I personally agree with." - You probably

  • @randomcubing7106
    @randomcubing7106 3 года назад +1

    And there are people claiming that math is meaningless

  • @TheNuharoo
    @TheNuharoo 6 лет назад +54

    I'm thankful to live in an era when we have a society that is eager to bring out these stories that have never been told.

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +8

      This scene is completely fake.

    • @alessandrajimenez8512
      @alessandrajimenez8512 Год назад

      @@DontDrinkthatstuff do you have anything better to do than to troll? Go back to your Kool-Aid

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff Год назад

      @@alessandrajimenez8512 Wow. Good one. Never heard that before. /s

  • @DaveMiller2
    @DaveMiller2 3 года назад +1

    I'm wondering why the fact that Euler's method is ancient has anything to do with it being useful or not.

  • @derciobene3458
    @derciobene3458 2 года назад +26

    Do you not have a single physicist, applied mathematician or engineer on your team? Euler's method is like the first thing used when one decides to get the behaviour of a difficult differential equation without going through the hassle of solving it analytically. And btw, if Euler's method is ancient, so is everything else on that board. The laws of celestial mechanics have been known for quite a while now

    • @JohnH0130
      @JohnH0130 Год назад +5

      Perhaps so, now that you have computers fast enough to do millions of operations per second, making short work of the number crunching Euler's method entails. The characters in the movie did not have that capability available when they were being educated, and had not considered how computers could be used to apply Euler's method to solve such problems quickly. That's the whole point of the scene.

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Год назад +3

      @@JohnH0130no, it was routine to do it on computer back then. Or with electromechanical calculators and some big-ass printed tables.

    • @lylestavast7652
      @lylestavast7652 Год назад +1

      @@peterfireflylund Long Live Printed tables !!!

  • @CT-pi2gl
    @CT-pi2gl 2 года назад +1

    There is no way the real problem for NASA was trying to find an analytical solution for the maneuver, while the solution was solving it numerically. That's like telling a Master Chef, "why don't we try adding salt?"

  • @kera_flynn9213
    @kera_flynn9213 6 лет назад +5

    Sheldon, is that you?

  • @theillusionist0482
    @theillusionist0482 6 месяцев назад +2

    Can anyone suggest more movies like this or The help??

    • @eg-cv3bz
      @eg-cv3bz 3 месяца назад

      Boyz n the hood and menace 2 society

  • @shubhanshujha5326
    @shubhanshujha5326 6 лет назад +6

    This scene becomes hilarious when he says 'it's ancient'... Seriously they made mockery of math for a lame scene

  • @14rs2
    @14rs2 Год назад +2

    You know someone is good a math when they show up Sheldon Cooper 😂😂

  • @BDTTK9
    @BDTTK9 6 лет назад +4

    It’s like magic when she puts chalk to board and does mathematic calculations

    • @ericfermin8347
      @ericfermin8347 4 года назад +1

      Oh dear lord....

    • @BDTTK9
      @BDTTK9 4 года назад

      Eric Fermin you got smth to say 👁👄👁 say it to my face bitch

  • @jcnot9712
    @jcnot9712 3 года назад +1

    -someone’s just told me what year they were born. I should subtract the year they gave me from the current year in order to find out their age.
    -Subtraction? But that’s ancient.

  • @Justque_88
    @Justque_88 2 года назад +3

    Bottom line is she played the role of the one of the worlds most brilliant minds!!!!

  • @tommyheron464
    @tommyheron464 2 месяца назад +1

    Euler... But thats ancient maths. Like most maths. Im glad pi wasn't mentioned. But pi is really ancient. W.t.f.

  • @jasondelgado1949
    @jasondelgado1949 7 лет назад +69

    i actually cried at the ending of this movie, such a beautiful yet powerful film

  • @ratuadilFF
    @ratuadilFF Год назад +1

    Memang aku memberikan ide-ide itu, dengan komunikasi dimensional kami
    Li meneliti dan menerjemahkannya didalam real techno,
    Begitu juga teman2nya .

  • @emperorpingusmathchannel5365
    @emperorpingusmathchannel5365 4 года назад +4

    "That is ancient" jesus christ this movie doesnt understand math

    • @jimhardy743
      @jimhardy743 4 года назад +1

      It's not about math. It is about Hollywood trying to brain wash people into thinking that blacks are intellectual and have made these great contributions to our history. Which, of course is all PCBS

    • @m0nkeysnot
      @m0nkeysnot 4 года назад +1

      @Samara Dantas he probably means politically correct bullshit. i dont understand how people live thinking like that

    • @jimhardy743
      @jimhardy743 3 года назад

      @Samara Dantas acronym for Political Correct Bull Shit.

    • @fcos9704
      @fcos9704 3 года назад +2

      @@jimhardy743 this was real tho... so your argument is invalid for this particular case

    • @jimhardy743
      @jimhardy743 3 года назад

      @@fcos9704 hollywood propaganda bullshit...just a pathetic try to make it look like blacks had some kind of role

  • @ottoconde5988
    @ottoconde5988 4 года назад +1

    It’s ridiculous that Taraji P. Henson was not even nominated for an Oscar for this movie.

  • @xaviertran
    @xaviertran 3 года назад +3

    I like how Shelton says "let's type it up" as if by sneaking in the contractional version of "let us" no one in the audience would notice

  • @Frir10
    @Frir10 5 лет назад +1

    "But Euler's method is ancient. We can't use that. Math has changed completely since then. For instance, the number 3 is now 7... Anything used from that time is completely out of date!"

  • @simmisharma
    @simmisharma 6 лет назад +3

    It's funny how I'm so intrigued but I don't have any idea of what's happening

  • @jessicasimplicioreis3824
    @jessicasimplicioreis3824 2 года назад +1

    Tirei uma única conclusão depois da escola... que nos tds iremos morrer kk... cada ano que passa nos vamos morrendo...🤫🤡💚👨‍🍳😎

  • @chrisramm1
    @chrisramm1 5 лет назад +10

    My father used to tell me you could work out anything mathematically, and you know he did, he took one chain of stores in the UK from an almost run to the tenth largest company in the country in the late 70's. People had different skills then.

  • @ratuadilFF
    @ratuadilFF Год назад +1

    Rencananya aku jadi pembina tim red flag. Gigantic project city base ,

  • @REL1C
    @REL1C 6 лет назад +6

    This movie lost me when someone at NASA has to grab a book to do Euler's Method.

    • @captainkielbasa5471
      @captainkielbasa5471 3 года назад

      @Paul Kryder if you can't rederive Euler's method in your head in less than 15 seconds and you work at NASA as an engineer or mathematician, you should be fired immediately. This scene is beyond comical

  • @Weebs82589
    @Weebs82589 4 года назад +2

    Just found out about eulers method. It truly is ancient math, they didn’t teach me that in school! Man I would have love to have met Katherine Johnson and maybe she could explain it to me.

  • @derekxiaoEvanescentBliss
    @derekxiaoEvanescentBliss 6 лет назад +13

    I might be missing something but what kind of legitimate mathematician would need to look up the equation for euler's method? it's like early undergraduate /possible high school level math...

    • @mizjohs
      @mizjohs 5 лет назад +2

      Exactly. Katherine hasn't done math at that level since about 4th grade. Twenty five years later, a refresher is needed, especially since she is so meticulous about having every little thing correct.

    • @captainkielbasa5471
      @captainkielbasa5471 3 года назад

      @@mizjohs no its akin to needing a refresher for doing 2+2. It's trivial

  • @zTheBigFishz
    @zTheBigFishz Год назад +1

    Ancient? So is integration. Euler's method is taught to everybody in their first Differential Equation class.

  • @sayres99
    @sayres99 7 лет назад +45

    Aint that something watching a women give a whole room of male rocket scientists a math lesson.

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 6 лет назад +1

      It happened. Not as dramatically, but it happened. Look up the story of Percy Lavon Julian some time.

    • @EZRDEN
      @EZRDEN 6 лет назад

      sayres99 And The only women besides her is the secretary.

  • @NickCager
    @NickCager Год назад +1

    If you believe that seen actually happened then I have a bridge to sell you... "We're in the middle of a rocket launch to space, but we didn't count on having to calculate trajectories!" This is insulting... to everybody.

  • @restlessbeing1398
    @restlessbeing1398 6 лет назад +3

    Omg!!! Sheldon did make it into nasa

  • @emperorpingusmathchannel5365
    @emperorpingusmathchannel5365 4 года назад +2

    Yeah that is not what we do when we apply eulers method. Also nobody takes a damn book to remember euler's method.

  • @calwatkins1283
    @calwatkins1283 4 года назад +3

    0:38 we need more people like her

  • @snp27182
    @snp27182 Год назад +1

    LMAO hurhr duhr differential equations were invented hundred of years ago, theyre outdated!
    This must be a comedy.