Mathematical problem

Joined
Jun 20, 2000
Messages
3,668
Our youngest son, who is a physics major in college, is a mathematical whiz.

Anyway, I have an interesting mathematical equation, expressed through the use of photography for the objects and words for the operators:

cooper-m22-phoenix-26.jpg


"plus"

6.5x55-first-20.jpg


"divided by"

sjtac-satin-snakeskin-1.jpg


"equals"

ken-antelope-10012009.jpg


"plus"

10012008-antelope-05.jpg


Note that parentheses are not required due to operator precedence. :D
 
Awesome! I love #'s and hunting so it was real easy to get the answer:thumbup:

great pics as usual DOC.:)
 
Wow. In teh out-of-doors and all covered in blood'n'gunk, the scales look like dark tigerhide.

Great job, Lunde. Another head on the wall.
 
hlee, you wrote:
It really took 20 shots?!?!?!:eek: Good shootin':D
The ones I harvested in 2006, 2007, and 2008 were one-shot affairs. I fired a total of three shots this year. The first shot was done offhand at 150 yards or so in very low light with snow coming down and high wind. The second shot was a running shot at about 100 yards. The animals were running full speed, so it was no wonder I missed. The third shot, at 210 yards, was off the back of my dad's pickup truck, meaning some support.
 
No offense meant. I've seen the perforated targets you have posted in the past.:eek: I think that your pictoral equation is an inequality. There is/are no empty casing(s).:D
 
I have reviewed your equation, and it is incorrect.

There should be a remainder of some of these... :-)

6.5x55-first-20.jpg
 
If you ask nice, i'll teach you how to gut without getting blood all the way up to the skull crusher! heheh

Just kidding.
 
Actually, I am an applied mathematician ... and I don't see where the "problem" is.

Dr. Lunde has cleared developed a fully satisfactory solution.:D:thumbup:
 
I dunno, I'm an experimentalist, so any equation that I didn't come up with looks valid to me. :D
 
Another part to this equation was "solved" this morning, just before 8:30AM, with my dad getting his South Dakota pronghorn antelope, about 15 to 20 miles NW of greater-metropolitan Edgemont:

dad-antelope-10032009.jpg
 
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