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Two Teens Solve Pythagorean Puzzle

Calcea Johnson and Ne’Kiya Jackson were in high school when they came up with a new proof for the Pythagorean theorem.

Two teen girls pose with several men and women in front of balloons while holding gift bags.

Courtesy of AT&T

Calcea Johnson (center left) and Ne’Kiya Jackson (center right) were honored for their achievement at the 2023 Essence Festival.

Two high school students made headlines when they solved a math problem that’s stumped many mathematicians. Their feat even caught the attention of former NBA superstar Charles Barkley, who pledged a million dollars to the school the students attended.

In 2022, Calcea Johnson and Ne’Kiya Jackson were seniors at St. Mary’s Academy in New Orleans, Louisiana, when they entered a schoolwide math contest related to the Pythagorean theorem. The Pythagorean theorem says that the sum of the squared lengths of the two shorter sides of a right triangle is equal to the square of the length of the longer side. So if you know the lengths of two sides of a right triangle, you can use the theorem to figure out the length of the third side. Here’s how the equation is written:

a2 + b2 = c2

A theorem is a rule that can be proven to be true, and the Pythagorean theorem has been proven a few hundred times, using algebra and geometry. The contest asked for a new way to prove the theorem. Another way to say this is that it asked for a new proof of the theorem.

For two months, Johnson and Jackson used nearly every spare minute to work on the problem. Johnson’s mom said the pair’s work took up 20 or 30 notebook pages as they tried, failed, and tried again. Their persistence paid off. Johnson and Jackson came up with a new proof, but they didn’t use algebra or geometry to do it. They used trigonometry, another kind of math. Very few others have been able to prove the Pythagorean theorem using trigonometry. 

“There’s nothing like it—being able to do something that people don’t think that young people can do,” Johnson told New Orleans news station WWL-TV. “It’s usually, like, you have to be an adult to do this.”

Johnson and Jackson later presented their proof at a meeting of the American Mathematical Society. They were the only two high school students who presented.

Their remarkable achievement was widely reported. One of the people who heard about it was NBA player-turned-commentator Charles Barkley, who was impressed with both the young mathematicians and their school. In 2024, Barkley sent $100,000 to St. Mary’s. He’s promised to give another $900,000 to the school over the next 10 years.

Did You Know?

Charles Barkley has given millions of dollars to causes that are important to him, particularly education. Barkley, who signed with the NBA in 1984 at age 21, has since made a fortune doing commercials and sports commentary. He says he wants to give back.

“I can’t believe [how lucky I am in] my life,” he once told journalist Graham Bensinger. “I’ve got to bring as many people along with me for this ride as possible. I’m going to try to help as many people as I possibly can.”

Charles Barkley holding a microphone as a commentator and the younger Barkley in uniform dribbling a basketball.

© Megan Briggs/Getty Images, © Sports Images/Dreamstime.com; Photo illustration Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Former NBA player Charles Barkley is both a commentator and a philanthropist.

Cookie Math

Cookie Monster eats a cookie as he says C is for cookie and circumference in front of a blackboard full of equations

© Georg Wendt—picture alliance/Getty Images, © Andrew Ink/stock.adobe.com; Photo illustration Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Since today’s top story was about math, it’s fitting that October 1 is National Homemade Cookie Day in the United States. After all, math is a big part of baking. (So is chemistry, but that’s a story for another day!)

If you’re a baker, here are a few cookie calculations that might come in handy.

I’ll Take 15 Dozen, Please

If you have a recipe for two dozen cookies and you want to make 15 dozen cookies, you can use a mathematical process called the Baker’s Percentage to figure out how much of each ingredient you’ll need.

Cookie Crisp (or Not)

A cookie’s texture depends on the ratio of some of its ingredients. If you use more butter and less flour, you end up with crisper cookies. If you use more brown sugar and less white sugar, you end up with chewier cookies. That’s because brown sugar contains molasses.

No Chips, No-Go

There’s nothing worse than getting a chocolate chip cookie without any chips in it! But if a baker knows how many cookies they’re making and the number of chips they’re adding, they can use a mathematical formula to calculate the probability (chance) that any random cookie will contain a certain number of chips.

When Computers Were People

Katherine Johnson writes at a desk that holds an adding machine and several papers.

NASA

This 1960s photo shows “human computer” Katherine Johnson hard at work at Langley Research Center.

In September, a group of women once known as “human computers” received the Congressional Gold Medal, America’s highest award for citizens. Working for NASA in the 1950s and 1960s, these women performed handwritten calculations that helped the space agency develop its space program. 

At the time, white men received most of the credit for NASA’s success. The contributions of the human computers remained largely unknown until their story was told in a 2016 movie called Hidden Figures.

You can learn more about many of the human computers at Britannica. Click the link to read about Katherine Johnson.

WORD OF THE DAY

conundrum

PART OF SPEECH:

noun

Definition:

: a confusing or difficult problem

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