Proofs without words
The following demonstrate proofs of various identities and theorems using pictures, inspired from this gallery.
Summations
The sum of the first odd natural numbers is .
The sum of the first positive integers is .
The sum of the first positive integers is .[1]
Nichomauss' Theorem: can be written as the sum of consecutive integers, and consequently that .
Here, we use the same re-arrangement as the first proof on this page (the sum of first odd integers is a square). Here's another re-arrangement to see this:
This also suggests the following alternative proof:
The identity , where is the th Fibonacci number.
Geometric series
The infinite geometric series .
The infinite geometric series .
The infinite geometric series .
Another proof of the identity .
The infinite geometric series .
The arithmetic-geometric series , also known as Gabriel's staircase.[2]
Geometry
The Pythagorean Theorem (first of many proofs): the left diagram shows that , and the right diagram shows a second proof by re-arranging the first diagram (the area of the shaded part is equal to , but it is also the re-arranged version of the oblique square, which has area ).[3]
Another proof of the Pythagorean Theorem (animated version).
Another proof of the Pythagorean Theorem; the left-hand diagram suggests the identity , and the right-hand diagram offers another re-arrangement proof.
COMING: The last (sixth) proof of the Pythagorean Theorem we shall present on this page, this one by dissection.
The smallest distance necessary to travel between , the x-axis, and then for is given by .[4]
In trapezoid with , then .
Miscellaneous
The Root-Mean Square-Arithmetic Mean-Geometric Mean inequality, .
The Root-Mean Square-Arithmetic Mean-Geometric Mean-Harmonic mean Inequality.[5]
Fermat's Little Theorem: for (above ).
References
- ^ MathOverflow
- ^ Wolfram MathWorld
- ^ Attributed to the Chinese text Zhou Bi Suan Jing.
- ^ This is more of a proof without words of the AM-GM inequality ; though the lengths of the segments labeled RMS and HM can easily be verified to have values of , respectively, it might not be obvious from the diagram. It still serves as a useful graphical demonstration of the inequality.