trigonometry shipping! opposite, hypotenuse and adjacent are all in a poly(gonal) relationship

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trigonometry shipping! opposite, hypotenuse and adjacent are all in a poly(gonal) relationship
over in the LFW server, we have been working out how many telegram forms you can fit on the floor of a hotel room if you screw them up and throw them away without reading them because you are Too Sad For Telegrams
opening bid is 3000 based on my highly scientific crumpling
Sorry, terrible drawing, just whipped it up and posted it.
Just another day in the Chaos Company ;)
🍑
What I do when I get bored. Fractals!
So, what's the deal with 'Dynamics of an Asteroid'?
[Note added later: 'Dynamics of an Asteroid' isn't even bloody mentioned until Valley of Fear, but I'm not rewriting all this when we do the novels, so, enjoy]
Kim Newman (who is my main extra-canonical text for stuff about Moriarty) says asteroids do not do anything dynamic and has the Astronomer Royal dismiss the book as rubbish. That official later regrets this decision, although not for academic reasons.
Wikipedia, of all places, has an actual lead: I can't find any sources for the Moriarty connection here so it may be original research that someone has snuck in, but the anonymous scholar points out that the first half of Moriarty's career slightly resembles that of Carl Friedrich Gauss. He discovered the dwarf planet Ceres and won a chair at a very young age after this achievement:
The discovery of Ceres led Gauss to his work on a theory of the motion of planetoids disturbed by large planets, eventually published in 1809 as Theoria motus corporum coelestium in sectionibus conicis solem ambientum. In the process, he so streamlined the cumbersome mathematics of 18th-century orbital prediction that his work remains a cornerstone of astronomical computation.
This is such a significant crossover of the concepts of 'legendary mathematician' and 'orbital mechanics of something that's not a planet' that I think it's at least worth noting. The story about Gauss as a small boy solving 'what is the sum of the integers 1 to 100' by doing it algorithmically has been inspirational to me since I first got my hands on a computer, as someone who is happy to sit all afternoon automating a process I could have done manually in an hour.
Edited to add: oh and it's especially funny because after Gauss's death they took his brain out and pickled it, just as Basil Rathbone said he'd like to do to his Moriarty once!