User:Pilover819

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Pilover819
My Userboxes (201)
This little tag you are reading is a userbox.
This user is a member of the Tropical cyclone Wikiproject.
This user has been on Wikipedia for
1 year and 1 month.
This user scored 2419 on the Wikipediholic test (revision 189076984).
Name This user's name is 유승우.
KST This user's time zone is KST.
This user does not observe Daylight Saving Time.
This user comes from The Republic of Korea.
이 회원대한민국에서 왔습니다.
이 사용자는 한국인입니다.
This user is of Korean ancestry.
This user is male.
10 This Wikipedian is 10 years, 9 months, and 22 days old
on June 11, 2008.
This user is from Seoul.
This user wants
Puerto Rico to be either
a State or a nation.
1, 2, 3... This userbox is a test. Please tell this user if you don't see it.
ubx This user uses userboxes.
{{!!!}} This user over-uses userboxes.
:-]
This user is polite.
if & whether This user knows how to use "if" and "whether" correctly.
This user has created no userboxes
This user didn't know there were two Montanas, one in Bulgaria and the U.S. state.
This user believes the state of West Virginia is in the Northern United States.
ko 이 사용자는 한국어모국어입니다.
en-3 This user is able to contribute with an advanced level of English.
es-2 Este usuario puede contribuir con un nivel intermedio de español.
\sum_{k=1}^\sqrt{n} k^2
This user's favorite subject is Mathematics.
Pri This user is in primary school.
This user is a Christian.
This user is a member of Wikipedia.
Fx
This user is interested in astronomy.
This user is intersted in meteorology.
This user sleeps, but not for predictable amounts of time.
Pi ≈ 3.1415926535897932384626
This user is interested in polyhedra.
This user enjoys thinking in Four Dimensions.
e \ne \frac {p} {q} This user can prove that the number, e, is irrational
\pi \ne \frac {p} {q} This user can prove that π is irrational.


This user knows how to
Find X
FoundX
This user is a mathie.
\sum_{i=1}^{\infty}{1 \over i^2} This user is an advanced mathematician.
1+1=10 This user likes binary.
1+2=10 This user likes ternary.
2+3=10 This user likes quinary.
3+3=10 This user likes senary.
4+4=10 This user likes octal.
3x3=10 This user likes nonary.
5+5=10 This user likes decimal.
6+6=10 This user likes dozenal.
8+8=10 This user likes hexadecimal.
4×5=10 This user likes vigesimal.
3×4×5=10 This user likes sexagesimal.
This user is a musician.
This user has absolute pitch.
This user is an expert in
music theory.
This user plays the piano.
pno-3 This user is an advanced pianist.
This user plays the viola.
vla-2 This user is an intermediate viola player.
This user plays the recorder.
rec-3 This user is an advanced recorder player.
SI This user measures both in metric system and American system units. ft-lb
IAU This user thinks the 2006 IAU General Assembly's definition for a "planet" is unfair!
This user loves calculators.
This user loves the Summer.
This user enjoys tracking tropical cyclones.
This user enjoys tracking hurricanes.
This user eats fries, or chips.
This user eats potato chips.
This user loves spaghetti.
This user eats bananas.
This user eats strawberries.
This user eats watermelon.
This user eats bagels.
This user loves pasta.
This user eats potatoes.
This user loves bacon!
This user loves to eat beef.
This user eats steak.
This user loves brownies.
This user eats chocolate.
This user prefers dark chocolate.
This user loves Hershey's chocolate.
This user likes Chocolate chip cookies.
This user likes Ice cream.
This user drinks hot chocolate.
This user drinks orange juice.
This user drinks milk.
This user drinks chocolate milk.
Fanta This user drinks Fanta Orange.
Fanta This user drinks Fanta Grape.
ginger ale This user drinks ginger ale.
MD
This user drinks Mountain Dew.
Coke This user likes to drink Coke on occasion.
This user doesn't drink, and has a healthy liver to show for it.
C2H5
OH-0
This user is a non-drinker.
This user eats at McDonald's

'3'
This user has set foot in '3' countries of the world.

'2'
This user has set foot in '2' continents of the world.
This user has never left the Northern Hemisphere.
This user is from Earth.
This user would like to live in America.


This user has visited Arizona.
This user has visited California.
This user has visited the District of Columbia.
This user has visited Florida.
This user has visited Illinois.
This user has visited Maine.
This user has visited Maryland.
This user has visited Massachusetts.
This user has visited New Hampshire.
This user has visited New Jersey.
This user has visited New York.
This user has visited Pennsylvania.
This user has visited Vermont.
This user has visited Virginia.
This user has visited 2 of the 13 provinces and territories.
2
This user has visited 18 of the 50 States and the District of Columbia.
18
This user uses
Windows Live Messenger.
This user is not interested in Uncyclopedia.
Wikia This user spends time on Wikia.
This user maintains a blog.
G This user uses Google as a primary search engine.
This user uses Wikipedia as a primary point of reference.
This user uses Gmail as a primary E-mail service.
This user uses Windows Live Hotmail as a primary email service.
Y!
This user uses Yahoo! Mail as a primary email service.
This user enjoys reading non-fiction.
This user spends far too much time editing his/her user page.
This user is interested in computers
This user has no cell phone.
Leo This user is a Leo.
5th Grade This user is in 5th Grade.
This user's favourite colour is blue.
G This user's favourite colour is green.
Hurricane Katrina
May we never forget…
This user is a Sudoku addict.
This user is a Kakuro addict
This user enjoys playing chess.
This user passed GO !
(…so where is my $200?)
S1 This user is a Scrabble player.
Cards This user enjoys playing
card games.
This user enjoys playing
blackjack.
Cards This user enjoys playing
UNO.
This user plays ping pong.
This user is a proud cyclist.
This user enjoys inline skating.
This user is a swimmer.
This user is interested in motor racing.
This user enjoys skiing.
███
███
This user is an intermediate skiier or snowboarder.
This user plays badminton.
This user plays basketball.
This user loves to bowl but would love to get more strikes.
This user plays golf.
This user plays football, but prefers to call it soccer.
This user enjoys playing golf.
This user needs more userboxes. MORE, I tell you, more!!! Muhahaha!
END This user has no more userboxes.
ubx This user uses userboxes.
This user has a television set.
G This user is a Gryffindor.
Mug
This user is a Muggle.
This user enjoys writing.
snkt This user says sneaked.
with, at, in, for, to... This user has no opinion about ending a sentence with a preposition.


less & fewer This user understands the difference between less & fewer.
their, to, your, its, ... This users english is far from being perfect!.
Majority ≠ right This user recognizes that even if 300,000,000 people make the same mistake, it's still a mistake.
. The This user does not put two spaces after a full stop.
A, B, and C This user prefers the serial comma.
its & it’s This user understands the difference between its and it’s. So should you.
“…!” For quotation marks, this user would rather use “American punctuation.”
"..!" This user believes that punctuation should always come on the inside of Quotation marks
; This user is addicted to semicolons; he or she uses them frequently.
US This user uses American English.
US American English is used by this user.
AIM-1 This uzer has an amateur understanding of the AIM talk. Brb
AIM-Able This user understands AIM talk perfectly well, but does not use it. Ever. Well, sarcastically sometimes. But that's it. Really. lulz.
ipa-3
ə
This user has an advanced understanding of the International Phonetic Alphabet.
한글 This user can read the Hangul alphabet.
한글 디스 유저 캔 리드 더 한글 앨퍼벳.
ko-
han-2
이 使用者는 普通水準漢字의 理解가 可能합니다.
This user is interested in the History of Korea.
This user is interested in the history of the United States.
C-0 This person does not understand C (or does not want to program in C).
en-
us
-4
This user has a near-native understanding of American English.
en-us This user can speak American English.
SoE-1 This here fella or lady has a basic understanding of Southern English, meaning they probably know what "y'all" means.
en-
ca
-1
This user has a basic understanding of Canadian English, eh.
ascii This user understands ASCII.
pig-1 Isthay useryay isyay ableyay otay ontributecay ithway ayay asicbay evellay ofyay Igpay Atinlay.
IntS-1 This uxor is a lamer at Internet slang, but still lieks to throw in teh occasional "lol" or "omg" on their blog.
LE-1 This user's been known to screw up the occasional sentence and make the occasional typo, but is otherwise pretty accurate with regards to English.
ubx-4 This user is an expert userbox user.
... This user would not like to know any more languages.
dlph-0 This user cannot speak, has considerable difficulty speaking, or does not wish to speak dolphin.
sar-2 This user is an intermediate speaker of sarcasm.
This user loves using Google Earth.
exactly 200 ubxs This user has exactly 200 userboxes.
This user needs just one more userbox on his/her page!
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Total edits made: 1301
Mainspace edits: 252
User Edits 942
Wikipedia: 38
Template: 8
Talk: 54
Image: 7
Vandalism on this page: None
Last updated on: 2008-05-23 0857 UTC

I love pi than any other number or subject! I was born August 19, as you know because of the username. I made the headlines into subpages, as there were 28.6 KB of worthless space.

Contents

[edit] Subpages

[edit] Milestone

[edit] Milestone

I finally made my 100th mainspace edit as a user in Wikipedia on April 7, 2008. It was made on Tropical Storm Dean (2001) or Hurricane Dean (1989); I don't remember.

  • 100th edit: April 7, 2008
  • 1000th edit on Wikipedia: May 6, 2008 on the sandbox

[edit] About me

Main article: User:Pilover819/LOUBX

[edit] Math

Main article: User:Pilover819/SMath

Math is my favorite subject. I'm about 4 grades ahead in math than others.

[edit] My Discovery

[edit] Pi

My favorite subject in math is numbers, especially Pi. It's 3.14159..... it goes on forever. There are currently 1.2411 trillion digits of pi known. It was found on 2002. I used to know 253 digits of pi.

[edit] E (number)

My second favorite number is e. It is called the Euler's number. The first ten digits are 2.7182818284... This number also goes on forever.

In 2004, a mathematician found out that a pandigital approximation (1+9-47*6)3285 can find 18457734525360901453873570 digits of e.

[edit] Gamma

My third favorite number is the Euler-Mascheroni constant, better known as Gamma. It is 0.5772156649... This number, again, goes on forever, but we don't know yet if this number is irrational or not.

[edit] The golden ratio and the Omega constant

My fourth and fifth favorite numbers are the golden ratio, also known as phi or tau, and the Omega constant. The golen ratio is approximately 1.61803398874989484820... and the Omega constant is approx. 0.56714329040978387299...; those two mathematical constants are also irrational! Isn't that great?

[edit] Pascal's triangle

                1
             1     1
          1     2     1
       1     3     3     1
     1    4     6     4     1
   1    5     10    10    5   1
 1   6   15     20    15    6   1
Pascal's Triangle.

Pascal's triangle is an arithmetic triangle. I got interested after my dad taught me the Pascal's triangle. Here are some rows of the P.t.: As you see, the second one plus the third one is 2, thus 2 is on row 2, place 1. To see more rows of the Pascal's triangle, try the Wikipedia's article on Pascal's triangle. Here is the OEIS's site:OEIS on Pascal's Triangle


[edit] Relationship with other math systems

                1
             1     1
          1     2     1
       1     3     3     1
     1    4     6     4     1
Simplices' vertices, edges, etc.

You can use the Pascal's triangle as m-dimensional figures in an n-dimensional simplex. In a "point" (0-D simplex), there is 1 point (row 1, column 1). In a "line segment" (1-D simplex), there are 2 points (row 2, column 1) and 1 line segment (row 2, column 2). In a triangle, there are 3 points (row 3, column 1), 3 line segments (row 3, column 2), and 1 triangle (row 3, column 3), etc. Look:

As you see here[1], the shallow diagonals of the Pascal's triangle are the Fibonacci numbers. There is a section on Fibonacci numbers, go here.

                1
             1     1
          1     2     1
       1     3     3     1
     1    4     6     4     1
   1    5     10   10    5    1
 1   6   15     20    15    6   1
Showing the Fibonacci numbers 3 and 8. Shown in bold and italic.


                1
             1     1
          1     2     1
       1     3     3     1
     1    4     6     4     1
   1    5     10    10    5   1
 1   6   15     20    15    6   1
Mersenne numbers in the Pascal's triangle.

Also, if you add up k rows (by that I mean from row 0 to the k-1th row), [2], you will get Mersenne numbers. For example, here is 1+1+1+1+2+1=7, which is 23-1, a Mersenne number, also a Mersenne prime.

[edit] Cartan's triangle

The Cartan's triangle (no Wikipedia article), is the Pascal's triangle's OLDER BROTHER, so to speak. The number on the left is doubled everytime, while the Pascal's triangle is not. The numbers in the Cartan's triangle are related with hypercubes. Here are the first 7 rows of the triangle:

                                         1 
                                      2     1
                                  4     4     1
                               8     12    6     1
                            16    32    24    8     1
                         32    80    80    40   10    1
                      64   192    240   160   60   12   1
Cartan's triangle.

As you see, these are powers of 21 (12 if made backwards), because as you see in Row 1, there is 21. And in the second row, you see 441 which is 21². As you go on, you see two+ digit numbers on the Cartan's triangle. So then you do the same thing to it; carry it down to the number on the left. Here's a link on the Cartan's triangle: Cartan's triangle

  • Note: If you have Excel, you will be able to make the Cartan's triangle bigger and bigger.

Here is OEIS's site:OEIS on Cartan's Triangle

[edit] Fibonacci sequence

The Fibonacci sequence is sequence where the previous two numbers are added together to make a new number. [3]The first few Fibonacci numbers are 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144...

If you want to see the 10 millionth Fibonacci number, go here.

[edit] n-nacci number

If the previous 1 number was added, it would be this: 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1... so "Fibonacci numbers" were created. Let's see what Fibonacci numbers can transform into:

[edit] Tribonacci

Tribonacci numbers are where the previous 3 numbers (notice "Tri" in tribonacci) are added together to make a new number. The first few Tribonacci numbers are 1, 1, 2, 4, 7, 13, 24, etc.

[edit] Tetranacci

Tetranacci numbers are where the previous four numbers (notice "Tetra" in tetranacci) are added together to make a new number. The first couple of Tetranacci numbers are 1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 15, 29, 56, etc.

[edit] More polynacci numbers

Polynacci numbers are solved like this: _____nacci numbers are where the previous n numbers (notice _____ in _____nacci) are added to make a new number. The first couple of _____nacci numbers are, nF(n), nFn+1, nFn+2, etc. 5th order is "Pentanacci", 6th is "Hexanacci", 7th is "Heptanacci", 8th is "Octanacci", 9th is "Enneanacci" or 9th order Fibonacci numbers, 10th is "Decanacci" or 10th order Fibonacci numbers, and so forth.

[edit] Every number equals 1?

If 0=1=2, every number equals 0 and 1. For instance, let's use 3. 1+2 equals 3. But 1=2, so 1+1 equals 3. Then, 0=1. So 0+1=1 and 0+0=0, and 0+0=3 and 0+1=3. So 1=3. Try other numbers to see if this is really true. 0+1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+... can be 1 or 2! if 2~∞ and 0 equal 0, and 1=1, 45=1.

[edit] Simpleces, Hypercubes, and Cross-polytopes

These three things are multi-dimensional shapes. For example, a "heptacross" is a 7-dimensional shape, because of the prefix hepta-.

[edit] Champernowne constant in base 10

The Champernowne constant (in base ten) is a mathematical constant where all the positive whole numbers are listed in order. Any one of you can memorize most of this number, because it's simply 0.12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546...

The Champernowne constant is transcendental. It is probably irrational, too. Since the Champernowne constant is irrational, you can't memorize all the digits.

[edit] Science

Main article: User:Pilover819/SScience

Science is my second favorite subject. It has most of my favorite stuff.

[edit] Weather

Weather is my favorite subject in science. I know a lot about them, and I will keep learning more. The lowest and highest temperatures recorded are

  • -128.56 F and 135.6 F.

[edit] Thunderstorms

Thunderstorms are storms that includes thunder and lightning. There are isolated, scattered, strong, and sometimes severe thunderstorms. A severe thunderstorm is when the winds reach 39 mph, the same as tropical storm strength. These severe thunderstorms may create tornadoes. For categories of tornadoes, go and see this below: Tornadoes

[edit] Hurricanes

Tropical cyclones are storms that form in warm waters and have spiral arms (when they are hurricanes) like galaxies. They use the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. Almost every storm starts as a tropical wave, then forms into a tropical depression, and upgrades to a tropical storm. Then, if the winds are strong enough, it becomes a hurricane. The winds are usually over 74 mph to become a hurricane. I'll tell you the wind speeds of categories of hurricanes. They are known as tropical cyclones in the Indian Ocean, in the Atlantic and East Pacific Oceans they are known as hurricanes. They are known as typhoons in the West Pacific Ocean.[4]

[edit] List of tropical systems in the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season

See also: User:Pilover819/Archive0710

[edit] List of invests of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season

[edit] List of possible (sub)tropical systems

[edit] List of tropical waves of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season

[edit] Tropical depression

A tropical depression is the first step to becoming a hurricane. It as winds less than 40 mph, and it may upgrade, or it may be downgraded to a remnant low.

[edit] Subtropical depression

Subtropical depressions are depressions that form in the cooler waters and start to die down.

[edit] Subtropical storm

A subtropical storm is a storm that forms in the cooler waters and lower windshear. Usually the wind shear is 10 knots. It starts to die down if the wind shear is increasing.

[edit] Tropical storm

A tropical storm is a tropical cyclone that gets upgraded from a tropical depression. It has winds of 39 mph to 73 mph.

[edit] Category 1

It has winds of more than 74 mph, although less than 95 mph.

[edit] Category 2

Category 2 has winds of 96 mph or more, although it has winds usually less than 110 mph.

[edit] Category 3

Category 3 is the mark of being a major hurricane. Hurricane Gordon of 2006 is such a hurricane. It has winds of 111 to 130 mph.

[edit] Category 4

Category 4 has winds of 131 miles per hour to 155 miles per hour.

[edit] Category 5

Category 5 is the highest category in the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. It has winds of more than 156 mph. Hurricanes Dean and Felix of 2007 were Category 5 hurricanes.

[edit] Possible Category 6?

There has been a rumor about a Category 6. This happened after some hurricanes reaching winds up to 185 mph. If there was such Category 6, it would have winds of more than 175 or 180 mph.

[edit] Tornadoes

Tornadoes are funnel clouds that form out of supercells in severe thunderstorms. They use the Enhanced Fujita Scale. Before Feb. 2007, they used the Fujita scale. Here's a list of categories:

  • EF0: 65 to 85 mph
  • EF1: 86 to 110 mph
  • EF2: 111 to 135 mph
  • EF3: 136 to 165 mph
  • EF4: 166 to 200 mph
  • EF5: More than 200 mph, Sometimes 200 to 231 mph is used.

[edit] Space

Outer space is my third favorite subject. There are 8 planets and 3 dwarf planets. Here are the planets and moons:

[edit] Planets

[edit] Planets

[edit] Dwarf planets

[edit] Moons

  • Earth's moons


  • Ceres' moons

Ceres does not have any moons.


[edit] SciMathverse

Main article: SciMathverse

[edit] Awards

Main article: User:Pilover819/Awards

[edit] See also

Main article: User:Pilover819/SeeAlso

[edit] Math/Made up stuff

[edit] Science

[edit] Outer space

[edit] Weather

[edit] Others

TOTAL 37 INTERNAL LINKS

[edit] External links

Main article: User:Pilover819/EL

[edit] External links

[edit] Math

[edit] Science

[edit] Outer space

[edit] Weather

[edit] Other

[edit] My websites

[edit] References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

User:Weatherlover819 on Hurricane Wiki, a Wikia wiki