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Lee Sallows





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Lee Cecil Fletcher Sallows (born April 30, 1944) is a British electronics engineer known for his contributions to recreational mathematics. He is particularly noted as the inventor of golygons, self-enumerating sentences, and geomagic squares.

Lee Sallows
BornApril 30, 1944 (1944-04-30) (age 80)
Welwyn, Hertfordshire
NationalityEnglish
Known forGolygons
Alphamagic squares
Geometric magic squares
Self-tiling tile sets
Self-enumerating sentences
Scientific career
FieldsRecreational mathematics

Recreational mathematics

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Sallows is an expert on the theory of magic squares[1] and has invented several variations on them, including alphamagic squares[2][3] and geomagic squares.[4] The latter invention caught the attention of mathematician Peter Cameron who has said that he believes that "an even deeper structure may lie hidden beyond geomagic squares"[5]

In "The lost theorem" published in 1997 he showed that every 3 × 3 magic square is associated with a unique parallelogram on the complex plane, a discovery that had escaped all previous researchers from ancient times down to the present day.[6]

Agolygon is a polygon containing only right angles, such that adjacent sides exhibit consecutive integer lengths. Golygons were invented and named by Sallows[7] and introduced by A.K. Dewdney in the Computer Recreations column of the July 1990 issue of Scientific American.[8]

In 2012 Sallows invented and named self-tiling tile sets—a new generalization of rep-tiles.[9]

Triangle theorem

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Visual proof of Lee Sallows's triangle theorem

In 2014 Sallows discovered a previously unnoticed result, a way of using the medians to divide any triangle into three smaller triangles, all congruent with one another. Repeating the process on each triangle yields triangles similar to the original but a ninth the area.[10]

Personal life

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Lee Sallows is the only son of Florence Eliza Fletcher and Leonard Gandy Sallows. He was born on 30 April 1944 at Brocket HallinHertfordshire, England, and grew up in the district of Upper Clapton in northeast London. Sallows attended Dame Alice Owen's School, then located at The Angel, Islington, but failed to settle in and was without diplomas when he left at age 17. Knowledge gained via interest in short-wave radio enabled him to find work as a technician within the electronics industry. In 1970 he moved to Nijmegen in the Netherlands, where until 2009, he worked as an electronic engineer at Radboud University. In 1975 Sallows met his partner Evert Lamfers, a Dutch cardiologist,[11] with whom he has lived ever since.

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Magic Square Update-2009, September 6, 2009
  • ^ alphamagic square Archived 2017-10-10 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Science
  • ^ excerpt from Word Play by Martin Gardner
  • ^ Magic squares are given a whole new dimension, The Observer, April 3, 2011
  • ^ Ancient puzzle gets new lease of 'geomagical' life, New Scientist, January 24, 2011
  • ^ Sallows, Lee (1997). "The lost theorem". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 19 (4): 51–54. doi:10.1007/BF03024415.
  • ^ Sallows, Lee; Gardner, Martin; Guy, Richard K.; Knuth, Donald (1991). "Serial Isogons of 90 Degrees". Mathematics Magazine. 64 (5): 315–324. doi:10.2307/2690648. JSTOR 2690648.
  • ^ "What is a Golygon?". Archived from the original on October 27, 2009. Retrieved 2010-10-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • ^ Sallows, Lee (2012). "On Self-Tiling Tile Sets". Mathematics Magazine. 85 (5): 323–333. doi:10.4169/math.mag.85.5.323. JSTOR 10.4169/math.mag.85.5.323.
  • ^ Sallows, Lee, "A Triangle Theorem" Mathematics Magazine, Vol. 87, No. 5 (December 2014), p. 381
  • ^ Farewell to cardiologist Evert Lamfers
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lee_Sallows&oldid=1235564153"
     



    Last edited on 19 July 2024, at 23:42  





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    This page was last edited on 19 July 2024, at 23:42 (UTC).

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