Saturday, August 15, 2020

Rainboots, Math, and MMs

Rainboots, Math, and MM’s This blog post is about the following picture: In particular, notice: First and foremost, my super-fabulous high-heeled rainboots. I got them at the COOP on Monday after coveting them for a year. I had been waiting for a rainy day to wear them, and today was the day: it came down steadily the entire day. I actually found myself walking outside through the rain parallel to an indoor hallway I could have used to keep nice and dry but I was looking for puddles to jump in! There is nothing like stepping confidently into the center of a deep puddle, knowing your boots are totally impervious to the wet. Except maybe the joy of strutting around campus in black-and-grey fleur-de-lis patterened high heeled boots. My new i choose 18 tshirt from the math department (which is Course 18. get it?) The value of i choose 18 is (34376687 + 1499084559 i)/14485008384, according to the back of the shirt, and google gives the approximation  0.00237769994 + 0.10368577 i. A lot of departments at MIT have really cool or clever tshirts, but Course 18s is the best (no, Im not biased)  The orange button on my shirt is says 14, my class year. Each year the MIT Public Service Center runs a competition between the classes to see who will donate the most money. I dropped by their table in lobby 10 and donated today. My hat, which I only wore today because I wanted to switch it up from the blue beret and the pink-and-grey kitty hat. The volunteers who recorded my donation to the PSC in lobby 10 said that the raindrops on the hat looked like glitter (see how I just tied like 3 different things together there?) The blackboard behind me, which contains the calculations to solve the following physics problem: how fast would you have to shoot an mm in order to make it all the way down the length of Bemis without going too high and bouncing off the ceiling. Bemis is what we call the middle third of my hall: the north third is Goodale and the south third is Walcott. They are actually named after the century-old alumni who donated the money to build East Campus, but I havent been able to find out anything about the people themselves. Anyway, we were doing this physics problem because, of course, someone had a huge bag of peanut mms, and we were spreading out in Bemis seeing how far away we could get and still catch an mm with our mouths. (And when I say we, I mean other people. I entirely lack the coordination to catch mms in my mouth.) If you want to do the math yourself, we were using 100 ft. for the length of bemis and 8 ft. for the height. We figured out that wed need to shoot the mm at about an 18 degree angle at around 74 feet per second. Which totally wouldnt kill someone, right? Lastly, the stop sign! It looks yellow! I swear its actually red, but when we took the picture with flash, the stop sign was so reflective it turned out yellow! Why did it do that? Thats so cool!

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