Science 2 min read

A Day to Celebrate Fibonacci!

Olivier Le Moal | Shutterstock.com

Olivier Le Moal | Shutterstock.com

Fibonacci Day is an annual holiday celebrated on November 23 in honor of the mathematician Leonardo Bonacci commonly known as Fibonacci. Leonardo Bonacci is known for presenting the Fibonacci numbers as a way to popularize the Hindu–Arabic numeral system in the Western world.

Born in Pisa, present-day Italy 1175, Leonardo Bonacci was considered the brightest Western mathematician of the middle ages. With the Liber Abaci and his Fibonacci Sequence, he was later honored as Leonardo of Pisa by his city, and a statue of his likeness was erected there in the 19th century. As a child, Bonacci followed his merchant father to Algeria where he learned about the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.

“Fibonacci day itself, November 23rd, which can also be written as 11/23 in mm/dd format, is a Fibonacci sequence.”

The Fibonacci Sequence

Each number in the Fibonacci sequence is the sum of the previous two numbers. An example sequence would be 1, 1, 2, 3, 5. Number 5, for instance, is the sum of 2 and 3, the preceding numbers.

The Fibonacci sequence was part of the Liber Abaci, Bonacci’s 1202 proposal to use the Hindu-Arabic numeral system, which he hoped would improve the western world’s ability to conduct business and keep records. The sequence itself was a solution to the mathematical problem of the growth of a population of rabbits. The proposed problem was what a rabbit population would grow to in one year starting with two newborn rabbits. Generation by generation, the idealized Fibonacci sequence successfully explained the rabbit’s population growth.

Fibonacci day itself, November 23rd, which can also be written as 11/23 in mm/dd format, is a Fibonacci sequence.

The Numbers in Nature

Fibonacci numbers are everywhere in the natural world, from a plant’s leaf organization, petals of the flower, to the arrangement of seeds on the flower head. Weather patterns leading to hurricanes and the pattern on a seashell also correspond to the sequence.

Even romanesco, a hybrid of broccoli and cauliflower, is a visual representation of nature’s correlation with the Fibonacci sequence.

First AI Web Content Optimization Platform Just for Writers

Found this article interesting?

Let Edgy Universe know how much you appreciate this article by clicking the heart icon and by sharing this article on social media.


Profile Image

Edgy Universe

EDGY is an SEO incubator, forecaster, and support center for deep learning, technological advancement, and enterprise-level end-to-end search programs.

Comments (0)
Most Recent most recent
You
share Scroll to top

Link Copied Successfully

Sign in

Sign in to access your personalized homepage, follow authors and topics you love, and clap for stories that matter to you.

Sign in with Google Sign in with Facebook

By using our site you agree to our privacy policy.