Math Magazine

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