Actividad

Studying the curve (the witch) of Agnesi

Personajes:

Tema: Representation of functions. Graphs.

Competencias

Competencia Matemática, en ciencia, tecnología e ingeniería

Competencia Personal, social y de aprender a aprender

Competencia en conciencia y expresiones culturales

Materias y cursos por Sistema Educativo

España > Matemáticas > 1º ESO > Sentido algebraico

España > Matemáticas > 1º ESO > Sentido socioafectivo

España > Matemáticas > 2º ESO > Sentido algebraico

España > Matemáticas > 2º ESO > Sentido socioafectivo

Enunciado


Maria Gaetana Agnesi was a famous 18th-century mathematician who published the first complete book on calculus. In that book, there were  graphs such as the following ones:

Agnesi curve 2

1.    Look at the following images. Do you think they represent the same function? 

2.    Now, you will study them in depth by comparing each one thoroughly. 

  1. For which value of X does the first function reach its maximum? And the second one? Do they coincide?
  2. When x=5, what is the value of the first function? And the second one? Do they coincide? 
  3. When x=10, what is the value of the first function? And the second one? Do they coincide?
  4. When x=20, what is the value of the first function? And the second one? Do they coincide?
  5. When x= -5, what is the value of the first function? And the second one? Do they coincide?
  6. When x= -10, what is the value of the first function? And the second one? Do they coincide?
  7. Now choose a different value for x and check if it is the same when applying the first function and the second one.

3.    After studying them in depth, what are your thoughts? Do they represent the same function or not? Why do you think they have a different graph? What is happening? Do you think there's more than meets the eye?

Observaciones y contexto

- Alternatively, we can tell students how this curve was mistranslated as "the witch of Agnesi" instead of "Agnesi’s curve" and explore what connotations or motivations there could be behind that mistranslation (by a man) of one of the best texts on mathematics at the time, written by a woman. 

- Some of Maria Gaetana Agnesi's forerunners in mathematics, philosophy and astronomy are Theano of Crotone (c. 546 BC - c. 450 BC), Hypatia of Alexandria (c. 370 – c. 416) and, in the early modern period, Sophia Brahe (1556-1643), Maria Cunitz (1610-1664), and Elena Lucrezia  Cornaro Piscopia  (1646 -1684).

- Some of her contemporaries were renowned scientists such as Margaretha Kirch (1703-1744), astronomer; Faustina Pignatelli Carafa (1705-1785), physicist and mathematician; Émilie du Châtelet (1706-1749), mathematician, physicist and philosopher; Laura Maria Catharina Bassi (1711-1778), scientist, poet, and philosopher; Angelique-Marguerite le Boursier du Coudray (1712-1794), midwife; Dorothea Christiane Leporin (1715-1762), doctor; Anna Morandi Manzolini (1716-1774), anatomist; Marie-Geneviève-Charlotte Thiroux d’Arconville (1720-1805), chemist, anatomist, and biologist; María Juana Rosa Andresa Casamayor de la Coma (1720-1780), mathematician; Nicole-Reine de la Brière Lepaute (1723-1788), astronomer; Marie Anne Victoire Pigeon (1724-1767), mathematician, or Maria Angela Ardinghelli (1728-1825), mathematician and physicist, among others.

- Other relevant scientists in the 18th century were Maria Christina Bruhn (1732-1808), chemist and inventor; Claudine Picardet (1735-1820), chemist, mineralogist and meteorologist; Jeanne Baret (1740-1807), botanist and explorer; Caroline Lucrecia Herschel (1750-1848), astronomer; Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze (1758-1836), chemist; and Sophie Germain (1776-1831), mathematician and physicist.

Descripción

In this activity students will be shown two graphs of the same witch of Agnesi. Students will learn how both graphs are the same, even if they are represented differently. They will also work on mistakes and detecting fallacies. 

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