1st Edition

Everyday Life is Full of Math

By Jun Mitani Copyright 2026
210 Pages 157 B/W Illustrations
by A K Peters/CRC Press

210 Pages 157 B/W Illustrations
by A K Peters/CRC Press

210 Pages 157 B/W Illustrations
by A K Peters/CRC Press

This book explores how mathematics appears in everyday life. It presents math in a fun and beautiful way using knowledge at the junior high and high school level. It is written for general readers, not for experts. The book avoids difficult math and instead focuses on how new ways of thinking and careful observation can reveal interesting math ideas. It is divided into 33 topics. These include... Read more

Foreword Preface Section I TheWonders of Numbers and Shapes Around Us Chapter 1 Is “Paper” the Ultimate Strategy in a Rock-Paper-
Scissors Tournament!? Chapter 2 Math Magic with Tricks and Twists Chapter 3 The Numbers Around Us: Which Digit is Used the Most? Chapter 4 Conic Sections Created by Light Chapter 5 What Is the True Shape of a Crescent Moon Chapter 6  An Equation That Draws the Shape of a Pon de Ring Donut Chapter 7  The Method is Wrong, but the Result is Correct Chapter 8  A Mathematical Mystery! The Collatz Conjecture Chapter 9 Strange Magic Square Chapter 10  Rings That Look Different but Have the Same Volume Chapter 11  Convex Polygons and Radar Charts Chapter 12 What If We Used Dice to Decide How Much New
Year’s Money to Give? Chapter 13  Shapes Made with Triangles Chapter 14  Success Rate of the “Kendama” Challenge Chapter 15  Estimating the Dimensions of a 1-Liter Milk Carton Chapter 16  Seats on the Shinkansen (Japan’s bullet train) Divided into Two and Three Rows Section II Playful Math You Can Touch and Feel Chapter 17  Enjoying the Cleanup of Building Blocks Chapter 18  The Mysterious Surface Made of Cotton Swabs: A Hyperboloid Chapter 19  With 30 Toy Train Tracks, You Can Play for Over 200 Years Chapter 20  Is It Easy or Difficult to Make a Plarail Layout That Loops Back to the Start? Chapter 21  Looking at Pi Chapter 22  The Tower of Hanoi Algorithm Chapter 23  Folding Paper Along Curves Is Fun Chapter 24  Folding Paper to Reach the Moon Chapter 25 The Wonder of Repeated Folding Chapter 26  Modular Origami Balls and Polyhedral Duals Chapter 27  Pop-Up Figures Chapter 28  The Shape of a Peel Spun from an Apple Chapter 29  Fractal Figures Drawn by Coloring Grid Cells Chapter 30  A Rather Casually Made Star Polyhedron Chapter 31  The Wonder of Origami Crease Patterns Chapter 32  How Can We Fit As Much As Possible into an Envelope? Chapter 33 Spiral Made from Paper Tape Afterword

Biography

Jun Mitani is a professor of Information and Systems at University of Tsukuba, JAPAN. He received his Ph.D. in engineering from the University of Tokyo in 2004. He has been present post since April 2015. His research interests center on computer graphics, particularly geometric modeling techniques and their application to origami design. The origami artworks created by him have features that are three-dimensional shapes with smooth curved surfaces. His main books are “3D Origami Art (2016)” and “Curved-Folding Origami Design (2019)”. His unique origami has been well received around the world and he had received invitations to hold workshops and exhibitions in Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Israel and many other countries. His work had inspired the design of the trophy for the Player of the Match winner of each game at the Rugby World Cup 2019. He was appointed as a Japan Cultural Envoy from the Agency for Cultural Affairs and traveled to eight Asian countries to promote cultural exchanges through origami in 2019. In 2024, he was appointed as the official ambassador for the 65th anniversary of Plarail (a model train toy by Takara Tomy).

"The book is [...] excellent and I wish it had been available when I was thirteen or fourteen and starting to get interested in the neglected corners of mathematics.that aren’t covered at school."

-David Jackson, Ramblings on my bookshelves