The following is blatantly stolen (and slightly adapted) from Cosmic Variance
The decathlon combines ten different track and field events, so to come up with a final score we need some way to tally up all of the scores. You know what that means: an equation. Let’s imagine that you finish the 100 meter dash in 9.9 seconds. Then your score in that event, call it x, is x = 9.9. This corresponds to a number of points, calculated according to the following formulas:
points = α(x0-x)β for track events,
points = α(x-x0)β for field events.
That’s right — power laws! With rather finely-tuned coefficients, although it’s unclear whether they occur naturally in any compactification of string theory. The values of the parameters ?, x0 and ? are different for each of the ten events, as this helpful table lifted from Wikipedia shows:
Event
α
x0
β
Units
100 m
25.437
18
1.81
seconds
Long Jump
0.14354
220
1.4
centimeters
Shot Put
51.39
1.5
1.05
meters
High Jump
0.8465
75
1.42
centimeters
400 m
1.53775
82
1.81
seconds
110 m Hurdles
5.74352
28.5
1.92
seconds
Discus Throw
12.91
4
1.1
meters
Pole Vault
0.2797
100
1.35
centimeters
Javelin Throw
10.14
7
1.08
meters
1500 m
0.03768
480
1.85
seconds
The goal, of course, is to get the most points. Note that for track events, your goal is to get a low score x (running fast), so the formula involves (x0-x); in field events you want a high score (throwing far), so the formula is reversed, (x-x0). Don’t ask me how they came up with those exponents ?.
You might think the mathematics consultants at the International Olympic Committee could tidy things up by just using an absolute value, |x-x0|β. But those athletes are no dummies. If you did that, you could start getting great scores by doing really badly! Running the 100 meter dash in 100 seconds would give you 74,000 points, which is kind of unfair. (The world record is 8847.)
However, there remains a lurking danger. What if I did run a 100-second 100 meter dash? Under the current system, my score would be an imaginary number! 61237.4 – 41616.9i, to be precise. I could then argue with perfect justification that the magnitude of my score, |61237.4 – 41616.9i |, is 74,000, and I should win. Even if we just took the real part, I come out ahead. And if those arguments didn’t fly, I could fall back on the perfectly true claim that the complex plane is not uniquely ordered, and I at least deserve a tie.
Don’t be surprised if you see this strategy deployed, if not now, then certainly in 2012.
Personally, I think this’ll be covered by some bit of small print that says (if x>x0 for track, or x<x0 for field, then the score is Y)
Decathalon
The following is blatantly stolen (and slightly adapted) from Cosmic Variance
The decathlon combines ten different track and field events, so to come up with a final score we need some way to tally up all of the scores. You know what that means: an equation. Let’s imagine that you finish the 100 meter dash in 9.9 seconds. Then your score in that event, call it x, is x = 9.9. This corresponds to a number of points, calculated according to the following formulas:
That’s right — power laws! With rather finely-tuned coefficients, although it’s unclear whether they occur naturally in any compactification of string theory. The values of the parameters ?, x0 and ? are different for each of the ten events, as this helpful table lifted from Wikipedia shows:
The goal, of course, is to get the most points. Note that for track events, your goal is to get a low score x (running fast), so the formula involves (x0-x); in field events you want a high score (throwing far), so the formula is reversed, (x-x0). Don’t ask me how they came up with those exponents ?.
You might think the mathematics consultants at the International Olympic Committee could tidy things up by just using an absolute value, |x-x0|β. But those athletes are no dummies. If you did that, you could start getting great scores by doing really badly! Running the 100 meter dash in 100 seconds would give you 74,000 points, which is kind of unfair. (The world record is 8847.)
However, there remains a lurking danger. What if I did run a 100-second 100 meter dash? Under the current system, my score would be an imaginary number! 61237.4 – 41616.9i, to be precise. I could then argue with perfect justification that the magnitude of my score, |61237.4 – 41616.9i |, is 74,000, and I should win. Even if we just took the real part, I come out ahead. And if those arguments didn’t fly, I could fall back on the perfectly true claim that the complex plane is not uniquely ordered, and I at least deserve a tie.
Don’t be surprised if you see this strategy deployed, if not now, then certainly in 2012.
Personally, I think this’ll be covered by some bit of small print that says (if x>x0 for track, or x<x0 for field, then the score is Y)