Pascal's Triangle
Pascal's Triangle
getting different values for rolls of dice led him to the triangle. These discussions
later laid the
foundation for the theory of probability. The two major areas where Pascals
triangle is used
today are in algebra and probability specifically in regards to combinatorics.
Pascal is credited
because he investigated and took the information on this system of numbers,
compiled and
organized it so it made sense and was more useful. Pascal died in 1662 at the
age of 39 before his work was published. In 1665, his work Traite du triangle
arithmetique was published. In the
early 1700s, two mathematicians, Pierre Raymond de Montmort and Abraham de
Moivre,
published articles each naming the triangle after Pascal and so it became known
as Pascals
Arithmetic Triangle.
Symbolically Defined
Blaise Pascals work titled Traite du triangle arithmetique when translated into
English
means, A Treatise on the Arithmetical Triangle. In the first part of this publication,
he defines
the triangle as an unbounded rectangular array. Below in Figure 1, is an example
of Pascals
rectangular array and below that to the right is the array rotated 30 degrees to
show the more
familiar triangular appearance.
Drexel University. (1994-2006) Math Forum: Ask Dr. Math FAQ: Pascals Triangle.
Retrieved
from the web on May 30, 2011 from
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.pascal.triangle.html
Pickover, Clifford A. (2009) The Math Book, Sterling Publishing Company, New
York, NY
http://www.fq.math.ca/Books/Pascal/bondarenko-1.pdf