Categories: NewsOpinion

How maths puzzles can explain COVID spread

Mathematician Professor Marcus du Sautoy uses vampires and math puzzles to help young people understand COVID's exponential growth. He writes:

<p>Here’s a puzzle for you&period; A vampire has to feed on a human every month&period; But the trouble is that once bitten&comma; the human becomes a vampire&period; How many months does it take for the entire population of the planet&comma; estimated to be 7&period;8 billion&comma; to become vampires&quest; Is it 34 months&comma; 34 years or 340 years&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The puzzle illustrates the effect of exponential growth&period; Every month the number of vampires doubles&period; The trouble is that our human intuition is not very good at dealing with big numbers&period; Evolution has programmed us to be good at understanding the several hundred people in our local environment&comma; but we find it hard to extrapolate beyond our limited horizons&period; So&comma; most people are shocked to discover that after only 34 months&comma; everyone on the planet would become vampires&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A game of chess also illustrates the dangers of not understanding the fast pace of exponential growth&period; Legend has it that the game was invented by a mathematician in India who elicited a huge reward for its creation&period; The King of India was so impressed with the game that he asked the mathematician to name a prize as a reward&period; Not wishing to appear greedy&comma; the mathematician asked for one grain of rice to be placed on the first square of the chess board&comma; two grains on the second&comma; four on the third and so on&period; The number of grains of rice should be doubled each time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The King thought that he&&num;8217&semi;d got away lightly&comma; but little did he realise the power of doubling to make things big very quickly&period; By the sixteenth square there was already a kilo of rice on the chess board&period; By the twentieth square his servant needed to bring in a wheelbarrow of rice&period; He never reached the 64th and last square on the board&period; By that point the rice on the board would have totalled a staggering 18&comma;446&comma;744&comma;073&comma;709&comma;551&comma;615 grains&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The dangers of not understanding how doubling can turn one grain of rice or one vampire into so many has been graphically illustrated in our current crisis&period; Vampires have been replaced with viruses&period; The doubling in the number of cases of Covid-19 at the beginning of this crisis was happening every few days not each month&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Despite all the complexities and uncertainties that exist around the pandemic there is one number above all others that is important in helping us model the future&period; R0 &&num;8211&semi; the basic reproduction number&period; This is the number of people on average who will contract the disease from one person infected by the virus&period; It applies to a population of people who were previously free of infection and haven’t been vaccinated&comma; a perfect description of the population of the planet&comma; as this virus began to spread earlier this year&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If this number is above one&comma; then we witness an exponential growth of the spread of the virus during the early stages&period; If it is below one the virus gradually dies out&period; The good news is that our collective actions can influence the value of R0&period; As scientists who are advising the government are constantly stressing&comma; it all depends on keeping R0 below one&period; At some point&comma; we can hope to do that using a vaccine&period; But until that point&comma; it is our social actions that will act as the disruptive factor that ensures we see the numbers heading towards zero and not exploding with exponential growth&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Although we don’t yet have a way to protect ourselves against the virus&comma; mathematics does offer an intriguing way to guard against vampires&period; Less well-known than garlic or crosses&comma; one way to ward off the Prince of Darkness is to scatter poppy seeds around his coffin&period; Vampires&comma; it turns out suffer from a condition called arithmomania&colon; a compulsive desire to count things&period; Theoretically&comma; before Dracula finishes trying to count how many poppy seeds are scattered around his resting place&comma; the sun will have driven him back to his resting place&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Arithmomania is a serious medical condition&period; The inventor Nikola Tesla&comma; whose studies into electricity gave us the AC current&comma; was obsessed by numbers divisible by three&colon; he insisted on 18 clean towels a day and counted his steps to make sure they were divisible by three&period; Perhaps the most famous fictional depiction of arithmomania is the Muppets&&num;8217&semi; Count von Count&comma; a vampire who has helped generations of viewers in their first steps along the mathematical path&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Vampires are said to have their own numbers&colon; these are defined as a number that can be written as the product of two smaller numbers of half the length which contain all the digits of the larger number&period; For example&comma; 1395&equals;15&&num;215&semi;93&period; The two smaller numbers are called the vampire number&&num;8217&semi;s fangs&period; Although this is little more than a numerical curiosity&comma; mathematicians have proved that there are an infinite number of vampire numbers&period; Can you find some more vampire numbers&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h6><em>Professor Marcus du Sautoy is a British mathematician&comma; a distinguished author of popular science books and regular contributor for <&sol;em><em>The Times and The Guardian national newspapers&period; He holds the prestigious Simonyi Professorship in the Public Understanding of Science at the <&sol;em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;en&period;wikipedia&period;org&sol;wiki&sol;University&lowbar;of&lowbar;Oxford"><em>University of Oxford<&sol;em><&sol;a><em> <&sol;em><em>and is the chairman of <&sol;em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;app&period;mangahigh&period;com&sol;team">Mangahigh Board of Advisors<&sol;a><em>&period;<&sol;em><em> He is also the former president of the <&sol;em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;en&period;wikipedia&period;org&sol;wiki&sol;Mathematical&lowbar;Association"><em>Mathematical Association<&sol;em><&sol;a><em>&comma; and a Fellow of the Royal Society&period;<&sol;em><&sol;h6>&NewLine;

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