ASMSA sessions reach out to young students around the state

What’s the probability of rolling a certain number on a six-sided die?

If you said one in six, you’d be correct — that is unless you’re using Denise Gregory’s special die. Then the odds rise to about 100 percent since the same number is on every side. But don’t let anyone know, at least not until she has tricked the participants in “The Mathematics of Games Shows” class at one of ASMSA’s weekend Science and Engineering Institutes to give the wrong answer.

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Bright Idea: Alumni’s process could be breakthrough in solar cell industry

When Seth Shumate (’02) first saw the results of his simulation for a new approach to a silicon solar cell in February of this year, he thought something was wrong. What he saw must have been a mistake.
So he did what any good scientist does — he ran another simulation.
“I thought the system was malfunctioning so I took it to another machine, which does a more detailed sort of test, and it was real there, too,” Shumate said with a smile growing across his face. “Then we did it again — over and over and over. It was exciting to see, but I was really skeptical. I thought maybe one of the other grad students had turned up the lamp to give it too much simulated sunlight.”

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