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Heart Surface -- from Wolfram MathWorld

OliviaB rated 8 months agoFeatured Review
i love Wolfram mathworld! this is for onur, who I miss. A heart-shaped surface given by the sextic equation (x^2+9/4y^2+z^2-1)^3-x^2z^3-9/(80)y^2z^3==0 (Taubin 1993, 1994). The figures above show a ray-traced rendering (left) and the y==0 cross section ...

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jolie-laide rated 7 months ago
In the Desert In the desert I saw a creature, naked, bestial, who, squatting upon the ground, Held his heart in his hands, And ate of it. I said, "Is it good, friend?" "It is bitter -- bitter," he answered; "But I like it Because it is bitter, And because it is my heart." Stephen Crane
electroNik rated 9 months ago
Math and love...
oryano rated 9 months ago
Lol, parhamreza.
axe85 rated 8 months ago
I You
mayanks098 rated 8 months ago
heart is not that shape
JohnShepler rated 8 months ago
Here's the math behind Valentine's Day
OliviaB rated 8 months ago
i love Wolfram mathworld! this is for onur, who I miss. A heart-shaped surface given by the sextic equation (x^2+9/4y^2+z^2-1)^3-x^2z^3-9/(80)y^2z^3==0 (Taubin 1993, 1994). The figures above show a ray-traced rendering (left) and the y==0 cross section (right) of the surface. A slight variation of the same surface is given by (2x^2+2y^2+z^2-1)^3-1/(10)x^2z^3-y^2z^3==0 .
mansoor rated 9 months ago
Artistic facade of maths!! A heart-shaped surface given by the sextic equation
soliton rated 9 months ago
Hidden behind a hard-looking equation, the symbol of love...
galloog1 rated 9 months ago
At least it can get an interest in mathematics. You may not like it, but think of how many average people would.