Math Magazine
Across
- 4. Mark thee well, a vessel with no in nor out, whose curvature doth mock thine earthly senses.
- 7. Of what number, when applied to a vector, doth stretch or shrink it, whilst the direction remains steadfast?
- 8. Who amongst ye can hear the din of complex forms, each song but a simple tone beneath the bard’s analysis?
- 9. A path of points, each bound to a rule most strict, tracing a form in geometry's grasp.
- 11. A boundless sea, where numbers do sail ever onward, their voyage ne'er to cease.
- 12. Wouldst thou believe, from but one orb, twain shall emerge? Such is the folly of set, when torn and reborn.
- 14. Canst thou twist and stretch one path to another, whilst ne’er doth tear, within a space most serene?
Down
- 1. A line most beguiling, ne'er to touch yet ever pursued, as the curve doth near with steps unending.
- 2. By row and by column, doth thou reduce matrices to forms most simple, casting out unknowns 'til all is revealed.
- 3. Lo! Behold a cube that doth span a fourth realm, where eightfold corners conspire in dimensions unseen.
- 5. By what measure dost thou find the magnitude of thine vectors in this space, a function most true?
- 6. First of the infinite! The count of the endless enumerable, far greater than any mortal list may contain.
- 10. Let thine number be known by its divisors’ sum, where each factor doth lend its worth to the total.
- 13. Pray tell, if thou taketh a number and obey its rule of halving or thrice adding one, dost it not converge upon one?